Chasing losses is one of the most easiest way to loss all your funds, even become addicted and irresponsible with your gambling. When you begin to chase your loss, you'll start making decision that are not from your right sense of reasoning. You can even gamble until all your money has been exhausted just because you want the old loss back. If you gamble and experience any loss just take it as part of the experience because at first you are advise to gamble with what you can afford to loss with affecting any of your other financial activities.
It's true what you say chasing losses is basically useless, we won't get what we want, it will only complicate matters and there will be a lot of losses there and this factor is also influenced by big emotions about what happens because of expectations. not in accordance with reality and agree with you, if we have experienced defeat once or twice then take the positive side, namely from our experience that gambling results in more losses than wins, then we can use this as motivation and valuable experience so as not to lose. excessive gambling.
Man, it's a psychological trap, not simply bad luck. You feed the system and grow hooked on getting even, spiraling into self-destruction. Mathematically, the house always wins. They get you when emotion blurs your judgment and makes you desperate
You don't have to quit cold turkey. But those losses? Not failures, but data points. Every stroke teaches you about the game and yourself. Control comes in. Gamble for fun, but set limitations to avoid making it your life
Life is a big gamble, right? Job, relationship, everything is a gamble. You decide how much to put on the table. A little calculated risk, a plan to minimize losses, and unwavering self-belief can change the chances. Gambling should be fun, not depressing. Keep it sideshow, not main event, and you'll win