The Poker Reporter Blog
Heads-Up: Does Low-Stakes Grinding Beat a Day Job?
Created By: Daniel Skolovy Posted in: The Poker Reporter Blog, Thoughts from the Felt
The idea: pit two veteran poker players heads-up on either side (not necessarily the one they agree with) of a contentious poker topic and let them have at it. This week's topic: Does Low-Stakes Grinding Beat a Day Job?
The saying goes that grinding low-stakes poker will suck the life out of you, but playing poker for a living has its obvious benefits. And it doesn't matter if you 17-table $25 NL 40 hours a week or you bust a couple chumps a week at Ivey deathmatch.
Drawbacks are pretty much guaranteed, true, but the positives so outweigh the negatives that it's really no contest. Let's go over the positives, as they are the most fun.
Best of all, you work for yourself. There's nobody breathing down your neck telling you to get stuff done. You are your own boss. You have nobody to answer to but yourself.
This freedom is easily the best benefit by far. If you don't feel like playing one day, guess what? You don't have to. Which brings me to my next point:
You can take time off whenever you want. Oh, your friends are going to be heading out of town for the week and want you to join them? No problem; you can just play more leading up to that week and take the whole week off. No holiday problems; no nothing. You want the time off, you take it. Simple as that.
You set your own hours. Sure, playing poker is a job just like any other. If you don't put the time in, you're not going to get ahead. However, when playing poker you get to decide when you put those hours in.
If the games are no good then you can go for a run and come back or try again in the evening when the games are better. If you are going out at night then get your hours in earlier in the day. Flexibility my friend: it's the spice of life.
You can get up whenever you want. Obviously a huge bonus. Who likes getting up early? Nobody, unless they are sick and twisted. When you bend cards for a living you can get up whenever you want. Sleeping in till 1 p.m. never felt so good. I mean what else are you going to do when you are taking flops till 5 a.m.?
You can work from home. If you don't want to make a trip to the casino, any number of online sites are only a click away. Online poker has brought poker into our living rooms. And me and my 42-inch LCD TV and wireless mouse and keyboard are more than happy to welcome it in from the couch.
You can make serious money. Rarely are you going to be able to make the money that is out there to be made doing anything else for yourself. There are supernovas on Stars making 100k+ a year grinding microstakes.
How sick is that? You need no schooling for poker. Just the will to put in time to get better. Anyone can beat this game; it's just whether or not you want it bad enough.
So there you have it - even if you are just playing microstakes, you get to reap the rewards of the poker lifestyle. Contrast that with working every day in a cubicle getting blinded by fluorescent lights.
I think you'll all agree with me that taking flops is better than pumpin' for the Man any day of the week!
Bloggers
-
- WSOP Blog
WSOP 2010 news, live blogging, interviews, parties and side action from Las Vegas.
-
- The Poker Reporter Blog
Poker news, gossip, parties, donkstrikery and functioning illiteracy with the PL.com crew!
-
Recent Posts
-
- The Guest Blog
A menagerie of poker pros, celebrities, poker writers and industry figures.
-
- Positively Nerd Street
Pr0n for the poker nerd. Hardware, software, gadgets, etc; like poker, but from the future.
-
- Matt Stout's Allinat420 Blog
Online poker grinding and live tournament action with Matt “All In At 4:20” Stout.
-
- Jason Mercier Poker Blog
Million-dollar scores and the worldwide poker tournament circuit with Jason Mercier.
-
- Courtney Gee Poker Blog
Courtney Gee says goodbye to 9-5 jobs through the magic of poker.
-
- Matt ADZ124 Marafioti's Blog
High-stakes cash, live tournaments and luxury lifestyle with Matt "ADZ124" Marafioti
Comments
1PokerBoy
2008-05-03I used to make good money playing poker and loving the game. I quit playing professional poker while having the highest EV/hour that I'd ever had in my life. My three main reasons:
1. Socially limiting - Even if you play lots of live poker you are still just hanging out with other poker players.
2. Little personal growth - 100% on me and my bankroll. Thats how you keep score and key to becoming a good player.
3. A new professional challenge emerged - This of course was crucial for quitting at that time however the reasons I was ready for something new you will find in 1 & 2.
In addition I found the "you can work whenever you want"-part a truth with modification. I got most of my winnings when I found a great table with fish and then sat LONG hours to maximize my winnings. To quit when the circumstances are perfect just because you have played your "shift" is not really an option (if you want to call yourself a professional).
I could go on here but to sum it up, professional poker was great for me for a few years but then I needed a new challenge.