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#1
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find a niche internet business you can own and look after, and combine the poker and the company.
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#2
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I'll have my law degree in 18 months and I'll probably quit playing when I get a job. In the meantime poker's good money. i imagine that i might still play occasionally, but it would have to be high stakes to make it worthwhile (and i'd have to prove to myself that i'm a winner at high stakes).
i really don't enjoy gambling so i don't think i will have any problems with leaving poker. even now i take two or three weeks off at a time. |
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#4
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Good day? Bad day? Huge change of heart...make sure you aren't just on tilt.
__________________
That's how I rolled. |
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#5
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I just think its very possible if I continue to improve in: poker, bankroll management, stocks and investing, assuming I define a goal, construct ways to accomplish that goal, and properly apply it.
__________________
"Suffer the pain of discipline or suffer the pain of regret" "Rome wasn't built in a day" |
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#6
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That's a pretty lofty goal.
GL. |
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#7
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It also seems like kind of a silly one. I mean, if you have a great reason for it, fine. But I'll have a hard time believing it. Why would you do that to yourself now? During college? I cannot think of many more miserable ways to spend college than singlemindedly trying to get rich. Do that later. Learn about yourself right now.
Sound hokey enough? It's still true. |
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