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It would be great if beginners could understand this from the very start, but unfortunately, I see that no one wants to learn from others' mistakes, and everyone prefers to make their own.
Mistakes and mistakes may be the best reminder, but it requires a loss that will make anyone think more clearly before playing.
It's not easy, but if you don't try it, nothing will be done to overcome greed that could have happened more brutally.
By allocating funds and when to stop, it will be a good strategy.
Seeing a lot of newbies who get into gambling who are just wasting their money, it looks so wasted and even they don't realize that what they are doing will only be detrimental to them.
it's not about fun but it's already entered the area of addiction because you want to get the Jackpot you dream of.
Mistakes hurt, and certainly, often they are the only thing stopping the cycle. But suffering by itself cannot turn the game around. Others demonstrate the same pattern particularly in the new faces - money disappears, lesson forgotten. Though cautions seem empty against the force of habit and hope, you want to warn them. Theoretically, allocating money, creating lines, organizing exits, that is control. In actual life, the first thing to vanish when emotions grow loud is control. We discuss strategy while we ignore the fact that people are naturally driven for risk and reward and for thinking "maybe this time".
Addiction hides under a thousand disguises: optimism, boredom, loneliness, excitement. Most individuals will not see themselves until the cost is undeniable. And by then, oftentimes trust, self-respect, time, not just money, has gone missing. The hardest part is not the loss, but what it reveals. What are you really chasing? Really, what are you attempting to fix?