Self-discipline plays a key role in adhering to these principles. It requires people to exercise restraint, even in the face of temptation or emotional impulses, and to make decisions that align with their long-term goals and well-being. By practicing emotional control, knowing when to stop, and exercising self-discipline, people can engage in gambling responsibly and minimize the negative consequences associated with it.
For a gambler to fully practice that self-discipline sometimes they need to experience the worst they can get in gambling.
It's hard at first, but some gamblers become good gamblers after experiencing several mistakes in gambling.
Self-disciplined is hard to achieve and not all can practice that. But if learned, it's worth it.
It's true. Experience is the best mentor of all.
I've lost a lot of times after a win and that's because of the emotional joy of feeling lucky which leads to being greedy. I won't deny it, because I think these kinds of things don't only happen to me. This is an incident where a gambler has a choice to get out or continue and I think most of the time "to continue" is what they pick.
The truth is I haven't had a chance for a continuous winning streak where you could say it does happen to a player. I can get like x500 but next to that will probably be a losing streak. There's just only one way to escape it and that is to cash it out. Enjoy the profits and go back another day, pray that the system resets and you can have the same result when you come back.