March 27, 2011

A Portrait of the Artist as a Mid-stakes Grinder

Blog by : INTERNETPOKERS
7

(Edit: for maximum awesomeness, play the song at the bottom of this post and then start reading)

Hey guys, life has been good back in Austin. Getting my bearings straight with coaching, playing poker, studying the game, and all the rest of the crap I manage to waste my time with. But this week isn't about me. No, this week is something special. It's something of a love letter. It's a love letter to the MSNL player, the low-midstakes grinder who is tasked with the Sisyphean goal of moving up in poker. You, who toils day in and day out, grinding at the tables and looking up in awe at the seemingly unscaleable mountain that is high stakes poker... this goes out to you.
This week, I have edited and cleaned up a forum post that I wrote many years ago. I was 17 at the time of writing this. Back then I was a solid 3/6 6-max grinder. I was the biggest winner on the stars 6-max games and put in tons of volume, but I could never move up to 5/10. Every time I tried, I'd get smashed and would return to 3/6 to retool my coffers and try again. I was very disheartened by this, and was taking a long hard look at my own game and my journey as a poker player. Here's the post, cleaned up for all of posterity. For all you 1/2-3/6 players out there, I hope you enjoy it.

----
(Little Haseeb, circa 2007)

Okay, lately I've been thinking a lot about my game and why I'm not making obscene amounts of money. I've come to realize something absolutely and utterly incredible about the way that I understand this game and my place in it. I realize that I have been utterly blind to this... and you probably are too.

I have realized that there is an attitude that permeates MSNL players that is at its core utterly toxic to their development. It is this: many MSNL players treat "being good" as a vague and ethereal thing that we prescribe to someone's game. But they don't think about "being good" in terms of particular situations or attributes. I admit, that I am guilty of this as much as anyone else, and the more I think about it, the more I see what an absolute tragedy it is.

What is it to be good?

Good players tend to look like us. They play in spots like us. We read their thought processes, and we can follow them quite clearly. They post in our threads and share our opinions a lot of the time. We feel like we are probably good players too. We just have a few leaks, they're just "a little better." We don't wonder why, or how. We don't look at our game and lament, "This guy is doing something right that I am doing wrong. He is making more money than I am by doing things that I am not doing." No, not at all. He is just kind of better, I am just kind of worse. That's how it is. Maybe, over time, I'll become better like him. Everyone gets better that way, slowly.

There seems to be in the mid-stakes poker world a great deal of respect for "style." There is a certain point of scrutiny past which we will refuse to analyze people. "That's just his style," we'll say. "That play makes sense, but it doesn't fit my style." Well, guess what. Fuck you and fuck your style. There's a gigantic and ugly misconception of "style" as something artistic or special, something that makes you individual and inherently interesting because you play a certain way. That is for the most part a bullshit excuse for the fact that you're unwilling to take risks that you're not sure will work out or don't understand. Or, shit. How about it's simple denial of the fact that you are in fact bad at poker, and there are people much better than you who do different things than you?

Don't try to justify yourself with style, and don't try to excuse yourself from learning from other people's lines and creativity with the excuse of "style." If you are not beating 200/400NL, then your "style" doesn't mean shit; all it's doing is holding you back from making better and more interesting plays than your bullshit midstakes grinder mind can be comfortable with.

Your game is not just the behaviors and actions that you enact, but the thought processes behind them, which formed those behaviors in the first place. That is what will define you in situations where you are up against other good players who you will battle against for your winrate. We solidify those thought processes into habits, which we continually reuse in later spots without rethinking those habits. Now this is not necessarily a bad thing! A vast majority of these habits, for players who can beat mid-stakes, are going to be perfectly fine at the lowest levels (i.e., at playing most basic hands correctly, at beating fish). But for every poker player, there is some level of complexity at which your habits can no longer dictate the action for you, and you are forced to rationalize a new decision that you have essentially never made before. That is, you are forced to face this moment as new and original. Your "poker logic" cannot solve the problem for you, and the ghost in the shell is called upon to make its administrative decision.

Now, there are three things that separate a mediocre player from a great player in this respect. The first of these three things is that that the great player has habitualized many of the decisions that a mediocre player has to rationalize (that is, for a great player the ghost in the machine is called upon less often), which indicates that the great player has much more experience and can use his poker logic to generate solutions to more situations. The second thing is that a great poker player's poker logic will be finer attuned to making precise and optimal plays than the mediocre player's. His habits will be closer to optimal and will have fewer sloppy habits. But the last and most important difference is that the great player is capable of re-rationalizing many of the spots which approximate habitualized spots; that is, where a more mediocre player might be inclined to treat different variations on the same theme exactly the same, a great player will see a subtle difference in these spots, call upon his ghost in the shell, and let it decree a variation upon the habit already in place.

One of the biggest pitfalls to moving up is that people pay a great amount of attention to very salient spots, such as huge river decisions and bluffs, but they do not take the time or effort to re-rationalize lower level situations that contribute most significantly to their winrate. If you keep the fundamentals mostly the same of when you played 2/4 when you move up to 3/6 or 5/10, although it may appear as if you play not much differently than other people do in the large pots, you actually are sacrificing lots of EV in the smaller or medium sized pots because you are not re-rationalizing many of the decisions which you treated as routine at lower limits.

The distinctions you have to make to be a great player are very fine and numerous. I think that's probably one of the big reasons why very good players tend to shoot up the stakes MUCH faster than most people - it generally does not happen that somebody shoots up the ranks from 5c/10c to 2/4 extremely fast and then can't move up any higher. The reason for this, I think, is that such a person will be very used to treating poker strategy as a constantly dynamic organism, which he will formulate and reformulate in many degrees and aspects in whatever game he is playing, whereas somebody who plays the same stakes for a long time will realize that he'll simply be wasting his mental energy if he tries to think out every single routine spot he plays. The human brain doesn't work that way and cannot work that way. It's simply not economical. So over time these patterns become imprinted on your subconscious mind, such that to an extent when you are playing poker you could not tell someone who points at a decision and asks you "why are you doing this" - maybe you can tell them, "well, the variables X, Y, and Z of course," but that's not really why you did it. The truth is, the thought process NEVER consciously entered your mind, you are merely recalling a pre-formulated response to the situation. Now I don't doubt that any intelligent player will be able to re-rationalize the situation and explain after the action what the original thought process "should have been," had you had actually thought it out. However, mistaking the ability to recall a thought process afterward with having actually thought out the action is simply a fallacy, and in the long run if you don't have the self-awareness to recognize it, it will be your undoing. That is not to say that rationalizing the thought process has to be verbal, but most of us don't truly rationalize most of our important decisions. What this means, if you think about it closely... is that most of our leaks, most of where we're making our biggest and most profound mistakes... we are passing over in silence. We don't even give ourselves the chance to realize it. We are closing our eyes and riding the waves, without ever trying to learn how to perfect the ship we're sailing.

To bring this all back, I think again about myself. As I've been ruminating about poker over the last few days, it strikes me that I have had a great but subtle fallacy in the way I've been thinking about the game. It seems almost like a form of denial when I put it into words now. I realize that I have been treating the game of poker as combat between competing pre-rationalized strategies. For a long time while I was grinding out 3/6, I did not make most of my decisions. What I mean by that is, it was very rare that I respected somebody enough to decide that I needed to re-rationalize my decisions for medium-large sized pots, and that I would be capable enough of winning just by completely relying on the intuitions that I already had acquired after playing an enormous number of hands 12-tabling. I did not realize this at all, and would probably have denied it vehemently if you accused me of such a thing.

I was a winner, and that kept me complacent enough to know that I could beat everyone I was playing with, so it was probably good. But it never really occurred to me that a good player, if he moved down to 3/6, would be making 6-7 ptbb/100. 6 to 7! That's enormous! I could never sustain that. What would he be doing differently than what I'm doing to increase his winrate so much? What fundamental mistakes am I making that he wouldn't?? He would be playing so much better than me, making such better reads and decisions than I would! Why didn't that occur to me?? Why didn't it frighten me, inspire me, drive me? How could I simply rest, knowing how much I lacked that other people have? I think I probably treated a higher-level player, somebody who'd be able to make 6-7ptbb/100 at my stakes, as merely a set of pre-rationalized strategies that were more "optimal" than mine. He wouldn't be thinking these things out, he'd just have already thought them out a long time ago and routinized them, and so he'd be chugging along with the same absentness of mind as I had. But why do I let that excuse me from my own mediocrity? Why can I be okay with that?

Fuck. Fuck me. Fuck, fuck, fucking fuck.

Anyway, that's all I can think of. This probably sounds like nonsense to a lot of you and maybe it is, I don't know. Poker is fucking crazy, and I'm really bad at it, and I want to get better.

I will leave you with just one thought.

There are only three moves in poker. calling, betting, and folding. How can somebody who's only allowed to call, bet, or fold, be making so much more money than me?? It's only call, bet, or fold, but his decisions are making him so much more money than mine!

Shit, I gotta start call, betting, or folding better!

Thanks for reading,
Little Haseeb

(Ditto. - Big Haseeb)






Entry Tags:haseeb, dogishead, Midstakes, Grinder
14515 Views | 22 Comments

March 05, 2011

NBC Heads up Poker Championship 2011 Day One

Blog by : INTERNETPOKERS
1

Hey all,

At the moment I'm in Vegas with Jungleman and friends, here to support him in the 2011 NBC Heads up Poker Championship. This is my first time in Vegas after turning 21, so it's turning to be an awesome experience. Unfortunately I can't write for long at the moment, but here's a brief recap since getting here:

  • Barry Greenstein's beard is much more magnificent in person
  • Erik Seidel always seems a little bit lost wherever he is, but he's a sweetheart
  • Liv Boeree has a really cute accent
  • Thankfully, the things I want to do to Phil Galfond are legal in Nevada
  • Patrik Antonius is, yes, the reincarnation of the ancient Greek demigod Hercules
  • Live sets are a lot slower and more meticulous than TV. You'd never imagine how the players are actually experiencing the games from what you see on TV.
  • Phil Ivey lost to Jungleman in round one... sweet.
  • Below is a photo of me, Jungle and crew stealing a shot in front of the walkway:
  • Met Phil Hellmuth and Emmitt Smith. Jungle and Hellmuth were giving Emmitt some tournament coaching so he could give Viffer (David Peat) a run for his money. Pay attention, because famous people are important!


Not famous people around a famous person. Wow!

Some not famous people surrounding a famous person. Wow!


Hellmuth, Emmitt Smith, and a famous person!

Emmitt Smith, Phil Hellmuth, and a famous person. Can you believe it??

I'll be railing Jungle today, so I'll update this blog probably soon after the event is over. I might even talk more about famous people - !!

Here's hoping that Moneymaker gets Junglemanhandled,

Haseeb

Entry Tags:jungleman, NBC, heads up championship, phil hellmuth, emmitt smith
4826 Views | 6 Comments

February 26, 2011

The Two Things about Poker

Blog by : INTERNETPOKERS
1

I was in a coffeeshop a few weeks ago browsing the internet, when I came across this article by Glen Whitman called "The Two Things." In it, he recounts the story of the Two Things.

--

A few years ago, I was chatting with a stranger in a bar. When I told him I was an economist, he said, "Ah. So... what are the Two Things about economics?"

"Huh?" I cleverly replied.

"You know, the Two Things. For every subject, there are really only two things you really need to know. Everything else is the application of those two things, or just not important."

"Oh," I said. "Okay, here are the Two Things about economics. One: Incentives matter. Two: There's no such thing as a free lunch."

Ever since that evening, I've been playing the Two Things game. Whenever I meet someone who belongs to a different profession (i.e., a profession I haven't played this game with), or who knows something about a subject I'm unfamiliar with, I pose the Two Things question.

--

He then goes on to compile some interesting "Two Things" that people have come up with about their respective fields. Many of them were poignant and insightful, and a few of them I found quite amusing.

--

The Two Things about English Literature:
1. The text is really about writing.
2. Writing is really about sex.
-Marya

The Two Things about World Conquest:
1. Divide and Conquer.
2. Never invade Russia in the winter.
-Tim Lee

--

So I thought to myself - well, I'm supposed to be an expert on poker. What are its Two Things? To work well, they're suppsoed to be two principles of thought from which you could potentially derive all of poker theory. That is, every maneuver of thought at its most fundamental level should boil down to these two principles. I thought about it for some time, and if I were to try to simplify all of poker play and theory into two principles, it'd be this:

The Two Things about Poker:

1. Every action narrows down handranges

2. People are bad at being random

You could surely invent other "Two Things" about more specific subjects such as live poker, tournaments, heads up, variance etc. This was just my first take on it. If any of you guys have other ideas about the Two Things about poker, leave a comment - I'd love to read them.

P.S., I'm also going to be in Vegas next week, sweating Jungle in the NBC HU televised event. It's bound to be really interesting, so I'll be blogging about and probably taking some photos while I'm in Vegas. If you guys have any suggestions or requests regarding it, leave a comment. :)

Until next time,

Haseeb

Entry Tags:the two things, poker, poker theory
5079 Views | 37 Comments

February 24, 2011

The Keeper

Blog by : INTERNETPOKERS
2

Hey all. I've been super busy lately trying to get all my shit together here in Austin. Over the last couple of weeks I've been sorting out my rental properties here, dealing with family matters, reconnecting with friends, trying to find a condo to rent, and just relaxing some and trying to take a deep breath in my life.

I still remember the three days I spent driving home, during which I was writing the story of the million dollar prop bet. Unlike a lot of people, I tend to enjoy long drives by myself. It gives you time to just stop doing and just be. It lets you soak in the juices of your life, and lets your mind ferment a little. Driving back home by myself was rejuvenating. I spent my time exploring songs on my iPod that I had rarely or never listened to, thinking about my life... stopping only to eat, write and sleep. I'd call my friends now and again and shoot the shit, occasionally talk about how I was feeling. I slept in my seat in rest stops, and once in a Wal-Mart parking lot.

I kind of like sleeping in my car. There's something charmingly simple about it. A friend of mine now jokingly calls me "Little Kerouac."

The attention I got from the story I posted about the prop bet was dizzying to be honest. I wrote it mostly for catharsis and to help me process what happened, as well as be a lesson to others. I didn't expect for such charged emotions to be directed at myself or Ashton, but such is the poker world I suppose. My only intention at this point is to move forward and direct my energy constructively. In the end I think I've grown a little stronger and a little wiser. I don't regret anything I wrote, and I thank everyone who was understanding and level-headed in their commentary.

It's nice to get some peace and quiet here in Austin. I'm feeling oddly centered and confident in myself. I know there is a lot of work for me to do in poker, and I need to get a renewed focus on studying my game. The time I spent in Orlando with Jungleman and Ashman has really helped to sharpen my poker mind and get my theory back up to scratch. Jungleman is going to be joining me in Austin in a couple of weeks and we'll probably be living together here in Austin for a while, which will be cool. Studying poker alongside him will definitely strengthen my game further and keep me on pace. I'll probably write some more about Jungle in my blog as well, since he's a fascinating character study when it comes to online poker prodigies.

My goal for the year is going to be 500K net profit, so let's see if I can nail that. But one of my biggest focuses this year is going to be on making poker media - articles, blog posts, videos, and possibly some other cool stuff I can whip up. I'm also redoubling my coaching and taking on more students, so if you're interested in coaching for HU NL or PLO feel free to shoot me a PM here or on 2p2.

I'm going to try to update this blog more often, and I appreciate all of the comments that I've received - even the bad ones, haha. I have an idea for an interesting article about poker, so stay tuned to this blog. I am going to be updating regularly again, and make this blog into an interesting chronicle of poker, my life, and the silly little thoughts that sometimes pop into my head. :)

I've got my first CR video in a long while coming up on Friday, so be sure to check it out and leave a kind comment. It's been a while since I've done any of these, so be gentle! Also, I did an interview with TwoPlusTwo Pokercast that you can check out here (my segment is at 1:46:00).

Oh, and this song will clean your clock:

http://download.macromedia.com/pub/shockwave/cabs/flash/swflash.cab#version=6,0,40,0"> http://www.youtube.com/v/UjiswvTXdzA?version=3">

Till next time,

Haseeb

Entry Tags:
3177 Views | 14 Comments

February 10, 2011

The Million Dollar Bet, Pt. 2

Blog by : INTERNETPOKERS
6

You can find part 1 here: http://www.cardrunners.com/blog/internetpokers/the-million-dollar-bet-pt-1

---

I've arrived safely in Austin at my parents' house. My car parked on the street and is still packed with all my stuff. It's been a while since I've spent the night here. I'm sleeping in the guest room, since the bed in my old bedroom is too small for me now. There was a big storm here last night. I woke up a couple times in the middle of the night to hail pounding the roof and windows creaking. It's still cloudy this morning, but the weather has calmed. I have forgotten how quiet this place can be.

Earlier today I read some of the comments on the first part of my blog. I wasn't surprised at the assortment of awe, compassion, and indignation. But ultimately, this story isn't about other people, and it's not something I wrote to be gawked at or as a testimony for others to pass judgment upon, although I have no qualms if they do so. I have thought about these events a lot in the last few days that I've been driving on the road back to Austin. They say silence is fertilizer for the soul. When you're alone only with your thoughts, all you can really think about is the things you've done, about where your life is going, and who you are.

I wrote this story because I think it's an important story to tell, for myself and for others to learn from. Writing this isn't about making myself feel better, or to try to justify anything that happened. It's about owning who I am and how I feel about what happened that day. The rest, as they say, is history.


---


The parents had gone upstairs to check up on Ashton again, and Doug and I were slinked on the couch downstairs. At that point, we were only waiting. For what, we didn't know. Ashton's mother had declared to us that the bet was over, but we knew that Ashton wasn't going to simply concede. We knew he was going to fight and insist that he could go on and pull it off. The time was almost 11:45, and he was still less than halfway through the distance. I thought the bet was over and we were going to deal with the aftermath. I remember sitting there on that couch and just feeling guilty and uncertain. We waited.

Finally around 12, Ashton's sister (who had defended us to his parents) came downstairs. She told us they were trying to talk to him, but Ashton wasn't saying much... all he said was he wanted pasta. She asked if either of us knew how to cook spaghetti. Doug and I looked at each other. "You do know we're poker players right?" She shook her head at us, and we laughed.

I went into the kitchen with her and poked around getting a pot ready for boiling spaghetti, and she gave me instructions while she returned upstairs into Ashton's room with the rest of her family. So I stood over the stove and watched the spaghetti. I remember asking Doug as I was standing over the stove, "Do you think I just came across to his parents as a total prick? I don't understand it. I mean I look out for Ashton don't I? I'm his friend aren't I? They were talking to me like I'm a slimy piece of shit. He was going to do this anyway, I know I couldn't stop him... I don't have control over him. I can't help someone who doesn't want my help."

He told me thoughtfully, "Well man... I think you're right. And I think they're right too. The answer probably lies somewhere in the middle, really. I don't think you did anything wrong. I don't think Ashton thinks you did anything wrong. And if I were his parents and I saw this whole mess, I'd probably react the same way."

"I know man, I know. I would too if I were his parents. But I just can't shake this feeling. I feel like shit about this whole thing."

"Well, we're in it now. We just gotta deal with it," he told me. The spaghetti softened slowly, and sunk to the bottom of the pot.


---


Ashton finally came downstairs. He was wearing sweatpants and a black hoodie with the hood over his head. I asked him how he was doing, how his legs and knees felt. Fine, he said. We didn't ask him about whether he was going to continue the bet. The way he walked in and was searching for food, we knew he was going to keep running. He didn't seem unnerved... he just wanted pasta. It was almost scary how comfortable he seemed. His sister poured him a bowl of spaghetti, and he sat down at his computer desk to start eating.

As he ate, he pulled up some music on Youtube. It was a dubstep track. "Have you guys heard this song?" We told him we hadn't. "Oh my god, it's so good." He started playing the music for us on the computer speakers as he ate. He bobbed his head to the beat, and soon started to air-drum on the desk. He ate his spaghetti that way, jamming to music he wanted to share with us. He still saw us as his friends, and in his silly way Ashton was still okay.

I remember looking at him carefully. I didn't dare to take my eyes away. The occupied expression on his face as he was clicking around on his computer, slurping that spaghetti. The bold white lettering on the hood of his hoodie, "TO WRITE LOVE ON HER ARMS." The silence that we didn't dare interrupt, as though we were just waiting for him to speak again. A tired boy in a hood eating spaghetti at his desk. I remember thinking to myself very clearly: remember this sight, Haseeb. You will never forget this as long as you live. I said nothing. I just watched him. He ate slowly and unhurried.


---


When he finally finished eating, he talked to us some more as he sat there digesting. Joking and laughing... he barely even acknowledged the insanity of the situation he was in. I remember thinking, how can he be so energetic right now? He seems happy. Is he happy right now? I said very little.

At around 12:30, he went back upstairs. When he came down, he had changed into his shorts and marched out the door once again, his parents following quickly behind him. They hadn't said another word to us after our previous exchange. In the end, I thought to myself, they couldn't stop him either.

So the bet went on into the night.


---


Doug had been coming down with a cold all that day, and his cough was getting noticeably bad. I told him that he should get some sleep and drink lots of liquids. There was no point in him staying up if the parents are going to be watching Ashton all night. I'll make sure everything's all right, I told him. He agreed and went upstairs to get some much-needed sleep. I was sleepy too; I hadn't gotten much sleep the previous night and my exhaustion was building, but I felt like I needed to stay awake.

Ashton's sister and boyfriend were in the living room with me. I told the sister, "I just wanted to tell you, I'm really grateful that you guys are here. I don't know how we could've handled all this if you guys weren't helping us out." She smiled and said not to worry about it. She and her boyfriend just laughed and said it was typical for their family.

They weren't phased at all. They were giggling at each other's jokes and pulling up clips on Youtube... they seemed so comfortable in the midst of all of this madness, just living and making the most of things. I realized that I admired them. I remember telling Doug before he took his Nyquil and went to bed, "Man... thank god for normal people." He grinned and agreed. "Fuck the poker world," I said, "We need to learn to be more like them." Doug went upstairs to sleep and the two of them ended up falling asleep together under a blanket on the couch.


---


At around 1:30AM, I realized I was so exhausted that I needed to get some sleep. I went to my bedroom and set my alarm for 2:45AM, deciding that I was going to get up and sweat Ashton for the rest of run. I was just too tired, I could barely keep my eyes open and my mind just felt racked with exhaustion. It all felt like too much. I remember staring blankly at the ceiling. I wanted to push my anxiety down and just sink into the covers. It took me a while to fall asleep.


---


I scrambled to my feet and checked my phone. It was almost 5AM; I had missed my alarm. I must've been too tired and slept through it. Fuck, fuck. I threw my clothes on, shoved my feet into my shoes, and ran out the door toward the gym. I realized I had to piss along the way, so I went into a corner behind some hedges and relieved myself. It made me feel surprisingly relaxed... I felt like I'd be ready to face the scene before me. I walked around the side of the building, entered in the passcode to the gym, and opened the door.

His mother was sitting on the recumbent bike, tinkering with a game on her phone. His stepdad was standing near Ashton, his arm resting on an adjacent treadmill. He was watching a cartoon on the TV's that were suspended over the wall. Neither of them looked at me or even acknowledged my presence. I said nothing.

I walked over to the far side of the gym, and sat myself down on a weightlifting bench. I checked the time on my phone - it was 5:15 AM. I decided to myself I would stay the rest of the time and just watch him. I thought I would be able to.

I sat there blankly for some time as he was running, just feeling my brain slowly process everything. All I could hear was the mechanical whirr of the treadmill, and the pounding as his feet hit the tread. It was so perfect and continuous, like a metronome. I studied him carefully. He was stripped down only to his boxers. His skin seemed to be stretched taut over his musculature. His face was looking down and toward the left as he ran... his gait almost seemed like he was scurrying to catch up with the treadmill. His eyes were blank. I didn't know what he was looking at or thinking about. I remember thinking that he looked pitiful. Like a caged animal. I knew it was all in my head, but the longer I looked at him, the more my heart sunk. I felt so enormously guilty in that moment, I couldn't even look at him.

I pulled my iPod out of my pocket and put on my headphones. I thought maybe that would calm me down. I played some soft, mellow music. I looked at my shoes as I listened. I could still hear the whirring treadmill, the pounding of his feet over my music. I looked up at him, feeling a little more steady. I watched his legs as he ran... they seemed so stiff and tightened. I remember my gaze settling on his knees... I watched them carefully. They swayed back and forth, like fleshy pendulums. The longer I watched his knees... the more I started to see little glimpses in my mind of his legs slipping, of his pace slowing down, of his knees creaking to a stop. The image of his legs slowing down would persist for a moment, and then those pendulums would come back. And then I would see him tripping and falling on his stomach... and then the pendulums would come back. My heart started to beat faster. I was getting more and more anxious, and I could feel my stomach tensing up as I saw Ashton losing the bet again, and again, and again. Yet every time, those pendulums would come back. No matter what I felt, he kept running. I closed my eyes. Everything felt heavy in that moment. It was overwhelming.

I got to my feet. I felt like I was going to throw up. I hurried outside, slammed the "Exit" button to unlock the door, and stood over a hedge in the cold air. I had been in there only twenty minutes, but I couldn't take it. It was like I was face to face with my own insanity. The anxiety was too much.

I realized that I was imagining my friend truly getting hurt. It wasn't just an intellectual transaction anymore. I saw it with my very eyes. I thought to myself... What kind of a piece of shit am I that I'm thinking like this? What the fuck is wrong with me?

I walked back to the apartment, just trying to slow down my breathing, trying to settle down my flurried mind.


---


I called my friend, who woke up in the middle of the night to take my call. I was frantic, "Fuck, I can't watch them. I can't. I'm going fucking crazy with anxiety just being in that room. I can't handle it."

"Hey, hey. Haseeb. It's okay," she told me. "Listen to me, it's okay. You don't need to be in that room. You need to just worry about you right now ok? Ashton's parents are in there worrying about him, he'll be fine. Focus on yourself. Just calm down, just breathe."

"Fuck, fuck Rachel. What if he has a heart attack? What if he goes to the emergency room? How am I going to even know? His parents aren't going to tell me. I was sitting there on that fucking bench, imagining him falling over... what kind of a person does that make me? What kind of fucked up person am I that I'm imagining him getting hurt? What's wrong with me?"

"Listen, Haseeb. Nothing's wrong with you okay. This whole thing is just mad. He's a madman, and he's brought you into a mad situation, and it's making you go mad too. Nothing is wrong with you. Calm down, okay?"

"I don't know Rachel. I don't fucking know. It was like I was invisible in that room, his parents wouldn't even look at me. I feel like such a piece of shit. I wish I had never done any of this. I didn't think it'd ever turn out this way. I thought that it'd be over by now, that he'd have realized he couldn't do this. I didn't think I was doing anything wrong by taking this bet. I'm going to feel like a piece of shit even if I win, or if I lose. I don't know why I thought that I'd be okay with this."

Things went on that way for some time. Talking to her calmed me down some, but I still felt like there a riotous pain in my gut... something twisting and flopping around inside of my stomach, and it would climb up into my throat and choke me and then sink back down again. I felt like a wretch.


--


When I finally got off the phone with her I was less frantic, but the bet was still towering over me. The image of Ashton running in that gym kept seizing my thoughts. I tried to browse the internet and keep my mind occupied. It was 7AM. Time was slowing down to a crawl. He texted me his progress, and I measured it up - he had been running almost non-stop since midnight. At 78% of the time he had allotted, he had run 77% of the distance.

As time went on, I would feel more and more anxious. I had never felt an anxiety like that before in my life; it was suffocating. The longer I would be alone with my thoughts, the more it would possess me. I was looking at the clock twice every minute. Eventually I got so fucked up in the head, I had to call someone again. The cycle continued like that. Every moment I wasn't speaking to someone, it would start to feel like I was drowning in my own mind.


---


At around 8AM, I called someone who I hadn't spoken to about this bet before. Her name is Ursula. She's my best friend's mother. I met and got to know her over a week when she visited us about a year ago, but I had spoken to her only a couple times since. She is a small, skinny, worldly Polish woman who works as a healer. I remember my leg shaking uncontrollably, staring at her number in my phone. It was 6AM in Utah. My heart was beating. I felt guilty for calling her at this hour, but I dialed the number.

"Hi? Who is this?"

"Ursula? Hi. It's Haseeb."

"Oh... Haseeb... how are you sweetheart?" she crooned in her slightly raspy voice. Even her voice sounded sagely to me. "Are you ok?"

"Hey... hey... haha... well... no, I'm not okay," I sighed nervously. "I got myself into something pretty crazy Ursula. I really fucked up bad and got myself into something I can't handle. I can't take being by myself right now. My thoughts are driving me crazy. I'm losing my mind, Ursula."

I proceeded to tell her all about the bet from the beginning. She murmured little yes's and oh my gosh's, and just followed along my story without interrupting me. I told her, "I'm so sorry Ursula for waking you up. I'm so sorry, thank you so much for listening to me... I just really needed to tell someone all this."

She told me it was okay and tried to calm me down. She told me that I was one of the wisest and most mature young men she knew, and that she was surprised I had found myself in this situation. She told me that ultimately, this would be a great lesson in my life, and that Ashton would be an important teacher in my life as well, whether he knew it or not. "What matters now most is whether you will learn the lesson that life is teaching you now, or if you need to be given this lesson again Haseeb. Ultimately, your challenge is going to be to see this through to the end, to acknowledge everything you're feeling, and then you must be able to forgive yourself. And once you can do that, and emerge from this without feeling like a victim, you'll be able to move on in your life, in your mind, and get back on the road you were meant to be on."

Then you must be able to forgive yourself. This phrase especially stuck with me. Even now, sitting here at my parents' home in Texas, it reverberates in my mind. I spent three days on the road alone in my car, wrestling with those words. I will never forget it.

I thanked her.


---


She had instructed me on a breathing exercise to do that would make me relax. I remember the mantra she told me to repeat:

"I trust in the process of my life completely."

I had hung up the phone and was lying down on my bed trying to slow my breathing. Staring up at my ceiling, I calmly said aloud... "I trust in the process of my life completely."

In that moment, some part of me became prepared to lose. I knew that I was supposed to lose the bet. That I was right to lose the bet. Because somewhere in all of this, there was a lesson that I needed to learn about myself, and about the world, and I had to accept that it was myself who brought me to this insane moment. 300k was going to hurt, a lot. When I made the bet originally, I realize that I wasn't really prepared mentally to lose 300k. I could handle it, I'd be okay - money can be made back. But ultimately money wasn't what really would affect me the most.

I thought about these things for a while. It was almost 9:00 AM. He had three hours left.


---


I woke up Doug, telling him that the bet was getting close to the end. Ashton's mileage had now pulled very slightly ahead of pace. It was going to be down to the wire whether he managed to finish. I told him I was losing my shit, and I just needed to talk to someone. He got his clothes on and we went to get some breakfast to calm our nerves.

As we were talking over breakfast, Ashton texted us. He had done 60 miles, and there were 3 hours left to go. He wrote "I'm going to do 10 miles in 3 hours no problem. If you want to buy out now, you can for 200k. As a favor to you." Doug and I were surprised.

"Man... there's no way I can take that buyout. To pay 85k to have a shot at a million dollars? I need less than 10% chance of winning to stay in. The last ten miles have to be the toughest. We knew that going in, that it would get exponentially more difficult the further he went on. Ashton has a point at which he can't run anymore, everyone does. He's never done this kind of endurance running before. The only question is whether his body will hit its limit at 69 miles or 71 miles. I can't take this buyout. "

Doug agreed. We told him no. He asked if I was sure, if I really believed that this wasn't cake for him. I said I couldn't take that buyout. We didn't hear back from him.

Before we left the restaurant, I dropped $5 in a charity collection.

We drove home in silence.


---


By 10AM, Doug couldn't watch Ashton either. He said he couldn't handle it in there.

So we waited.

Time dragged slowly.

I was talking to people when I could to keep myself from exploding. But when I was telling my friends about what I was feeling, my tone had changed completely. I had felt like I had already lost. I felt like it was over. I was preparing myself. The number 285,000 would roll around in my head like a ball bearing.

Time was slow.

We waited.


---


It was almost noon, and we still hadn't heard from Ashton. I couldn't even contemplate anymore what was happening. My mind was starting to numb, and I just wanted it to be over with. I was ready to lose, and I didn't care anymore... I just wanted it to be over. The bet had begun at 12:30PM the previous day, and it was already 12:00PM. It was truly down to the wire.

I heard the door swing open.

I ran into the corridor at the head of the stairs. I didn't know what I expected to see. My heart felt like it was being held up by wire strings. In that first second that I saw the scene before me, I didn't understand.

Ashton was being helped up the stairs by his stepfather. He barely had the strength to pull his legs up. He was gripping onto the rail for support. "Is he okay?" They didn't answer me. In that moment, I didn't know.

When he finally got the top of the stairs, he stepped into his room. He could walk. And then I knew.

It was over.

He had won.


---


I felt like I should be trying to help. It's not the time for me to worry about myself, I thought. I asked his mother how he was doing, what they were planning to do to help him recover, if they needed me to do anything. She told me that he was soaking in a tub of Epsom salt to help him recover. They said they were going to bring him food while he was soaking in there. He said he wanted pancakes. She was going to make him some.

I didn't know what to say. She told me then that they were going to take Ashton back to Ft. Lauderdale for a couple of days to let him recover. She said she would worry about him if he was here with us. It was then, the look that she gave me... as though I didn't belong there at all, that made it all start to sink into my skin. That's when it all started to hurt.

I asked again if they needed anything. She spoke to her husband. They ignored me.

I didn't know what to do anymore. I was exhausted. I went into my bedroom, texted a few people who were closely involved to tell them what happened, and sunk into my bed. I soon fell asleep.


---


The next couple of days were hard. I wasn't able to sleep well. I had strange dreams and would wake up after a couple hours. I dropped off Doug at the airport at 5AM the next morning, and from then on I was alone in the house. My mind felt heavy and sluggish.

I remember a friend of mine telling me "Haseeb, this is going to fuck with your mind a lot. You've had a tough year, you walked away from poker after getting hacked, and now you put up all this money and lose what seems like an impossible bet. You're going to have a lot of digging to do, just to get your head in the right place again. That might be what sets you back the most, is just being able to believe in yourself again."

When I walked around the house, I could see the remnants of everything that happened. I saw bags on the floor full of used Gatorade bottles and power bars. Ashton's sweaty clothes still strewn across the floor. A half-open bottle of spaghetti sauce. When I saw that, for the first time it made me want to cry.

I decided I needed to leave. Ashton knew I had already planned to leave Orlando on the 14th, a week later. But I needed to leave now. I couldn't stay in that place anymore.

I didn't hate Ashton. I didn't blame him. Everything that I experienced, that I felt, and that I did fell squarely on my shoulders.

That afternoon, I started packing my things.


---


Everything that happened over those two days made me question a lot of things about my life and myself. I made the drive from Florida to Austin over three days, stopping only to eat, sleep, and write. Ultimately, like Ursula said, I need to understand what this tells me about who I really am. And then I need to be able to forgive myself for what I did.

I'd never lived with other poker players before. I've always been something of an outsider to the poker world - almost an interpreter you might say. I'd always been surrounded by normal people living their ordinary lives. Living with these guys has taught me a lot about myself, about who I want to really be, and how I want to live my life.

Something that I've come to think about is that perhaps there's something about the world of poker players that's fundamentally unhealthy. This generation of online poker players and its culture has existed for less than ten years, yet I've always had some assumption lodged deep in my psyche that if I'm not finding happiness through poker that it's just something wrong with me. And yet, there are so many people at every level of poker who are so deeply unhappy. It leaves me wondering.

And perhaps that's what really is the most difficult challenge for this generation of poker players. To infiltrate a world that is at its root, deeply unhealthy and imbalanced. To grab this bull called poker by its horns and to try to tame it for as long as we can. We hold on, and the bull bucks and tries to throw us into the droves of insanity around us. Some hold on, some don't. And maybe some are being dragged along the ground by this bull, and think they're still okay because they haven't let go. I remember writing over a year ago that as much as we learn about the game of poker, nobody really teaches us how to live as poker players. Nobody teaches us when we're supposed to let go of the bull.

In the end, I don't know the answers to any of these questions really. I've thought about a lot of things over the last few days and my mind is still scattered.

Losing 300k is painful. It will make me a little more anxious about money, but ultimately I'll be ok. I know that I need to put my mind and resolve back together so I can step back into the bullring. I'll have a lot of work to do to get back to the top of the game. My challenge now is to get myself back onto the head of this bull. And though I know it'll throw me off again someday, I know I have to ride it.

It's part of the process of my life.


---


As I was in the process of packing up my computer, to my surprise Ashton came through the door. He had already come back home the next day. I asked him how he was feeling, and he said he was feeling alright. His knees were hurting, but he was alright. He said he needed a shower. There was a Super Bowl party he wanted to go to that night.

"We should talk," I told him. He nodded and went to have a shower.

I went outside and waited.

When he came outside, I was leaning against the car when he came up to me.

"This whole thing was really screwed up," he told me. "I didn't expect things to get out of hand like that."

"I know. But it is what it is, and what's happened has happened." I looked at him carefully. He was looking off in the distance. It was windy. "I didn't expect things to turn out the way they did either," I told him, "but ultimately I need to take responsibility for what I did. You could've seriously have gotten hurt, and I don't know how I would've lived with myself if that had happened."

He told me that he knew his body; that he knew he wouldn't get hurt. He wasn't so stupid that he'd agree to something if he thought he could get hurt. "That may be true," I told him, "and you may have totally believed that. But we didn't. And that's what matters."

He considered this a moment, and nodded.

"It was stupid to make this bet with you," Ashton said. "I just hope it doesn't affect things between us."

"Well, in the end nobody really won man. I felt like shit, Doug felt like shit, your parents felt like shit, and ultimately I know you feel like shit too, even after winning." He nodded. "I need to figure out some things about myself and my life," I told him.

"Are you leaving?"

"Yeah. Today."

"Jesus."

He looked off in the distance again.

"Before I go man," I told him, "I need to tell you something. You're still my friend Ashton. Everything that happened was really fucked up, but everything that I'm feeling right now is on me. I still care about you, okay? And I don't hate you. Even though I need to leave, it's because of shit that I need to deal with on my own. And if you ever need any help man, you can call me any time. You got that?"

He nodded. He reached out his hand to shake mine. I hugged him. "It was good living with you," I told him.

He had to go. He asked me if I'd be here when he got back later tonight. I told him I wouldn't. I was glad that I spoke to him before I left. After he drove away, I went back inside and looked around at the house. I realized that I was almost sad to see it for the last time. I knew that it was the end of an important episode in my life.

I finished packing my car, took with me a couple of the power bars that Ashton had left uneaten, and started the drive home. They tasted awful.


Haseeb



Edit: TL;DR generously provided by BigBadDevil: mo' money, mo' problems

Entry Tags:haseeb, ashton griffin, ashman, dogishead, 70 miles, prop bet
29733 Views | 63 Comments

February 09, 2011

The Million Dollar Bet, Pt. 1

Blog by : INTERNETPOKERS
7

The Million Dollar Bet - Pt. 1

I'm writing this sitting in my car at a rest stop somewhere in the panhandle of Florida. I am reclining in my chair trying to get comfortable, but I can't. I have all my stuff packed into the trunk and back seat. Rain is pelting the windshield, casting speckled shadows on my hands. I'm tired but I can't sleep. I don't know what time it is. Maybe 11, maybe midnight. I haven't been able to sleep well lately. The last few days have been tough.

I wasn't sure how to write about this. I wasn't sure what kind of a story there was to tell, or who really I would be writing a story for. Ultimately I just know that I need to express what I'm feeling and what I've gone through.

I suppose everything began last year. I took a long break from the game; I was away from poker for about 9 months after I got hacked. I was focusing on my own life - on getting healthy in both mind and body, and I was keeping my distance from the world of poker. I would attempt a few times to get my head back into the game, but it just wouldn't stick. I just didn't have that same drive to keep playing the game.


---


When I went to Vegas for the first time when I was 20 (July 2010), I met a lot of poker players I'd only known online, and one of those players was Jungleman. I found he and I had a lot of perspectives in common and he really admired me. We spent a lot of time hanging out and decided that we might live together at some point later in the year. We settled on going to San Diego around October, and we invited Ashton who we both knew to come live with us. He was going to school and wrestling at the time so he couldn't leave Orlando, but he ended up offering us to both come down to Orlando and live with him. It seemed like a good idea, since all three of us were strong poker players and we were all young.

So we did. Jungleman and I came to Orlando. The three of us spent a lot of time together - playing poker, feeling out the city, being young and stupid. For me this experience was a great opportunity since it was a chance for me to get my head back into the game, to focus, study poker, and to learn from these two really great players. It helped to re-ignite my passion for the game and also get my poker game back on track. I was a lot more mature than the two of them. Both Ashton and Jungle respected me. They would call me the "papa bear" of the house. I looked after them.

It was an interesting relationship between the three of us. But, well, I suppose the real story starts a few days ago.


---


Doug, a.k.a. WCGRider, had come to spend a week with us in Orlando. Jungle was supposed to be back from Australia on the 4th, but he ended up getting delayed so he wouldn't be back after Doug was gone. So it was just me, Ashton, and Doug.

Ashton had decided to buy some tickets to the Magic-Heat game on Thursday night. He offered me a ticket to the game, but I passed. I didn't feel like going. He ended up taking Doug as well as some other friends.

It was rowdy, they did a lot of drinking, and after the game they went to House of Blues for a concert. Doug later recounted the story to me: he went up to the bar at House of Blues to buy some drinks. Ashton came up to him and said "Hey, don't worry about it man, I'll get the drinks, it's fine."

Doug said, "Nah , don't worry about it. You already bought the tickets, I got the drinks man."

Ashton replied "Well, thanks...
... You know... I feel sad all the time."

Doug looked at him.

"I feel anxious and depressed, and I haven't been happy in a long time." Doug listened with a seriousness amidst this concert at the House of Blues.

"Well man, if you want help, all of us are here and are willing to help you."

He continued, "If you want to get your shit together, you need to stop all the prop-betting, you need to stop all the craziness, you need to just focus on poker, on school, and on your health man. And you can do it. We all know you can."

Ashton smiled at him. "Yeah, you're right. I can do it. I can change." And then the night went on. Ashton ended up leaving with a girl around 3AM. Doug and Ashton's sister who had also gone to the concert ended up driving back to the house by themselves.


---


Now, I was having trouble sleeping that night. I'm usually the first person awake, but I'd gotten up especially early that morning and ate breakfast. At about 11 I came into the living room and saw Doug sitting on the couch playing poker, and Ashton sitting at his computer. Ashton had only gotten home five or six hours ago, and had slept maybe four hours. He'd drunk quite a lot the previous night. He was on Skype with Justin Smith.

Doug and I watched as Ashton asked him to set up a prop bet with him. The very next morning, after four hours of sleep, Ashton was trying to set up a prop bet with Justin as to whether or not he could run 70 miles in a day. Justin was hesitant to accept - the more Justin hesitated, the higher Ashton raised the odds.

"1-1." "No, no, no..." Justin replied. "Okay, 2-1" "No..." "Okay, 3-1... 3.5-1, because you're my friend." As this went on, Doug and I exchanged looks as if to say - is he really doing this? - Ashton looked at me and said "Haseeb, 3-1 sounds fair right? You'd take this bet at 3-1?" I looked at him incredulously, glanced at Doug, and replied "Uh yeah, 3-1 sounds fair." Ashton turned back to his PC and finally said, "alright man, I just really want to do this run... 5.5-1." Justin simply said, "I'm going to sleep" and hung up. Ashton was visibly frustrated.

He then turned to me and said "Alright, you're booking that right?" And I said "Well dude, I'm not sure that's such a great idea."

"No man, I'm going to do this. I can do 70 miles no problem. I know my body." We discussed it and asked what's the most he'd ever run before. He told us that the most he'd ever run in one stretch was twenty-two miles. Ashton is very athletic; he's a collegiate-level wrestler, he ran cross-country in high school, and he'd run 13 miles just a couple of days prior. He's extremely fit. But he'd never even run a complete marathon in his life. He looked at me and said, "What's the most you can do?" I considered this for a minute.

As I was looking at him I thought to myself... I've been in this situation before. I've seen Ashton make lots of silly prop bets. I've seen him get scammed, burned, taken advantage of countless times, and I've also seen him offer a lot of silly prop bets that weren't in his favor. Every time I've refrained from taking part; refrained from having anything to do with it. I know that he fucks up a lot, and I know that he's a degenerate sometimes. I've known Ashton for years and I've watched him travel down his road. Many times along the way I've tried to stop him, to advise him, to pull him out of harm's way, but ultimately he finds himself there again and again.

I had come to realize that I can't stop Ashton from doing these things. I knew that no matter what I said or did, he was determined to do this prop bet. I know him, I know the frustration and anxiety he's been feeling, and I know the look in his eyes and the resolve in his voice. I thought there was no way that he could run 70 miles. The way I saw it, he was ready to grab a handful of his money and throw it into the wind. I can't save him. I can't stop him.

I replied, "Alright, I can do 70. 70k for your 210."

"Alright, it's booked," he replied. He finished eating his Dunkin' Donuts and ran upstairs to change into his shorts. It was around noon then. We set up the terms of the bet - he was given a span of 24 hours to complete the run. He had to maintain a running speed at all times on the treadmill - any walking or anything below that given speed would not count toward his total. He was free to take as many breaks as he needed. Doug up took a small piece as did another friend, but most of the action was mine.

He scurried off with a spring in his step to the nearby gym to start his running. And so at 12:30 PM on Friday the 4th of February, the bet began.


---


Doug and I began making phone calls. Anyone and everyone we knew who was knowledgeable about running, who had run marathons, who knew anyone who had run marathons. We asked people if they thought it was possible - some guy who's a collegiate wrestler who used to run cross country in high school, who had never run a complete marathon in his life. The overwhelming consensus that I got was that his chance to win was low, and some pegged it at close to 0%. Everyone who I asked about it was skeptical, and once I told them that he wasn't allowed to walk, I was told it would be close to impossible for somebody without any training in supermarathon running. To top it off... I hadn't mentioned to anyone that he'd been drinking the previous night and had gotten four hours sleep, or that he was offering me 3-1 on the bet.

At that point I thought that if all these people think Ashton can't do it, then there's no way he can win. He thinks he knows his body, but you can't know how your body would respond to that level of physical and psychological stress if you've never been there. He can't know. He can't know what three back-to-back marathons would do to his calves, to his knees, or to his heart. He still had alcohol in his system and had gotten almost no sleep, and I knew that he was feeling anxious. I figured this is Ashton standing in front of the railroad tracks again - this is him sitting at 500/1k heads up against Phil Ivey with his roll, desperate to have something change, for something to rile him up, to feel alive and meaningful again. He wanted to make himself the hero. The way I saw it, there was no way that Ashton could do this.


---


Doug and I went back and forth from the apartment complex gym where he was running. We brought him Gatorade, power bars, water bottles, and checked up on him to make sure he was alright and watched his progress. His sister decided to spend the day with us (after learning what he was doing), and helped us out ferrying food and drink back and forth. We watched him, kept track of time, and measured up his progress. At that point, it still seemed like just a frivolous spur-of-the-moment bet. I figured that my role was to make sure that Ashton was going to be okay once he got through to the other side - that after he gave up or lost the bet, that he'd be able to get his mind back together and get back on his feet. I knew it'd be hard on him when he lost.

Around 2PM Doug and I went to Ruby Tuesday's to get lunch. While we were eating, we got a text from Ashton saying that he was looking for more action, and that he was going to find other people to buy it up so he could put up 900k of his own money. I remember when he read that text aloud to me, Doug looked at me dumbfounded. We had no idea how to take it. The first thought that came to our minds was that Ashton was self-destructing. That he was putting it all on the line, and wanted all-or-nothing. I remember thinking that the sweat-drenched Ashton, in that musky little gym probably felt happier and more alive running on that treadmill than he had in some time. He had meaning in that moment. He must've felt that every pound of his muscle, every strain of his body had a meaning and clear direction behind it. He knew exactly what he was fighting for, what he was hurting for.

So I texted him, "alright, I'll buy up the rest." He texted back, "Are you sure about this?" "Yeah, I'm sure. My 285k plus the other 15k you have booked makes 300k. Consider it booked."

I thought to myself, he's giving money away. He's not going to stop until he sells off all of that action and puts up 900k of his own money. If I know he's going to throw 600k into the wind, what difference would it make if it were my hand that caught it instead of somebody else's? I mean, that's what poker players do isn't it? They make their plays where the money is. They don't hold grudges. We're just two poker players, playing a game. Whoever wins just made the right decision in that moment, and the loser understands that. It's not personal. Poker isn't personal. Well, it's not supposed to be, anyway.

As we drove back to the apartment complex, Doug and I were reflecting on how bizarre and fucked up the whole situation was. This was the most money I'd ever put on anything like this - I'm not a prop bettor, and the most I've ever bet on something was less than $1,000. It just felt surreal. Just talking about it made it start to feel more and more incredible (in the literal sense of the word). Doug said to me "Well you have to admit, either way, Ashton is a fucking animal."

I replied, "Well, that's true, but we're not betting on whether or not Ashton is an animal. We're betting on whether he can run these 70 miles today."


---


Once we returned, I caught up with Ashton on his way back to the gym and we spoke briefly. He asked me if I was sure I wanted to do this, and I told him I was. He said to me, "Why? Do you think that I can't do this? Do you think I don't know my body?"

I chose my words carefully. "I... I just think the odds are too good man. I can't pass up this bet."

He said, "Okay, then if you want to take this action there are two terms you have to agree to. The first is that you think there's a 0% chance that I would cheat. That doesn't mean you think there's a 1% chance that I'd cheat and you'll live with it, but you have to literally think there's a 0% chance I'd cheat you."

"Yeah, I know you're not going to cheat. Don't worry."

He continued, "Alright. The second term is that... this doesn't affect our friendship, even if I win. Or if I lose. We're still friends."

I studied him, thought for a moment and said, "Well, if you lose, are you still going to be friends with me?" "Yeah." "Well, if I lose I'm not going to hate you. So it's fine, we'll still be friends." I patted him on the back, and then we shook hands. Thinking back, it didn't feel like a million dollar handshake. Actually, I'm not sure what that would feel like, haha. I suppose it still didn't feel real. I just figured I'd regret it if instead of me some random poker player out there was 600k richer tomorrow. I kept making what I thought was the right move, but it would take me a while to process the gravity of what I had agreed to.


---


Ashton returned to the treadmill and started running again. It was 2PM then, and my anxiety was starting to build. I remember telling Doug, "You know, for 70k I could almost be zen about it. Losing 70k would suck, but I'd be alright. I could still focus on other things. But 285k man... the difference between winning and losing... -285k or +855k. This is a million dollar bet. I didn't realize this, but I'm not going to be able to play poker today man. Hell, I'm not going to be able to think about anything else..." He told me, "of course, what did you expect? You've got one hell of a sweat ahead of you man."

Time dragged by slowly. Doug and Ashton's sister continually updated me on his progress every half-hour, and I passed the time calculating Ashton's progress and mileage rate. I spent a lot of the time talking to friends and trying to keep myself grounded. I spoke to a friend of mine (who isn't a poker player) about the bet and he asked me, "So what are you going to do when you win your 850k?" I said, "Well, I don't know if I'm going to win yet. I could lose. But if I do win, I'm probably just going to buy a car and put the rest away." He chuckled. "What, like a hundred thousand dollar car?" And I said, "Nah, probably more like a 30k car." He knows me, and I'm not a flashy person when it comes to money - I live pretty simply, and I prefer it that way. He said to me, "Ah, man. Money is wasted on the rich." I laughed.


---


Ashton returned to the house several times, complaining that he felt tired a lot sooner than he expected. Around 4PM he curled up on the couch and announced to us that he was going to sleep for a bit. He didn't sleep, and ten minutes later he got up and went back out to run again. At 6PM he returned and announced that he was going to sleep for a few hours in his room. He stayed in his room for ten minutes, told us that he felt energized already, and then was out the door again. Ashton was completely unable to sleep. Doug and I figured that was definitive - he wouldn't be able to win. Without rest, his body wouldn't hold up.

At around 8PM, I spoke to a friend of mine who had some experience in running marathons. I told her the entire story, about how Ashton was feeling out of it, how he was unable to sleep, and that he'd been drinking heavily the night before. She told me with an unexpected graveness - "You guys need to be watching him constantly." I replied, "Well, we're checking up on him every half hour or so, bringing him food and drink and stuff." "No, no, you guys need to be there in case something happens. If he collapses or gets a heart attack, he'll need immediate medical attention. Somebody needs to be there. Like, right now. The likelihood will only go up the longer that kid runs."

Slowly, the realization settled in. I know Ashton, and I know how much heart he has. He's a beast. He'll keep pushing and pushing until the brink of his physical limits. The question was never whether Ashton had the force of will to win this bet, but whether or not his body could withstand it. In reality, I knew that Ashton wouldn't give up. The bet I was making was that Ashton would be physically incapable of going any further. I was betting that Ashton would either: pull a muscle and be unable to run, collapse from exhaustion, damage his joints, or have a heart attack. There was no other way that he would lose.

From that point, Doug and I agreed to watch him constantly, but before we could commit to a vigil Ashton had returned home around 9:30 PM. He said that he was going to sleep again, and this time he was in his room for a while. Doug and I waited around along with Ashton's sister in the living room downstairs. It all felt uneasy. Ashton's sister asked, "Do you guys think he's sleeping?"

Doug told us that he'd seen Ashton earlier when he stepped in to use the bathroom. He said that Ashton was sitting on his bed, just rocking quietly back and forth. "There's no way he'll be able to sleep," he said. "When I did my prop bet, I had to do something like that. It was different, but just like Ashton I had a time constraint and a lot of pressure. I remember I would play and play for hours during the day, and then when I realized I was tired I'd crawl into bed. But when I got into bed, I would stare up at the ceiling and all I could think about was the playing that I could be doing, and I would think about the fact that I wasn't sleeping, and I would get scared that instead of lying here staring at the ceiling I could be playing more hands, and then I'd get up and go try to play again... and when I realized I was too sleepy, I'd go back to bed and try again. The sleep was the hardest part. It's impossible to sleep when you're scared and the adrenaline is rushing. Trust me, Ashton won't be able to sleep."

Ashton's sister asked if there was anything she could do to help him sleep. He shook his head. The story seemed to be getting more and more fucked up the longer it went on. I wasn't expecting any of this. Ashton was going through something truly horrible. Rocking back and forth in that bedroom... all the fear and confusion he must've been feeling... us sitting downstairs waiting for our friend to give in. He was falling behind pace to win the bet. I was supposed to be relieved, but I felt miserable. The entire thing started to feel perverse.


---


Around 10:30PM his sister told us that Ashton's parents were on their way up here from Ft. Lauderdale, 3 hours away. Doug and I had no idea what to think. According to his sister, he had called his mother and simply told her "You need to come up here. I need your help." His sister had tried to get them to turn around, but they were insistent on driving up. This whole affair started to feel more and more like it was spiraling out of control, and we were now going to have to explain to his parents the whole situation. Doug was taken aback, but I was prepared to tell his parents everything.

It was almost 11:00PM and Ashton was still in his bedroom. He had completed 30 miles of the 70. Midnight would be the halfway point in the bet, and it seemed that he still had not gotten a wink of sleep. At this point, I was positive that the bet was over. Ashton had simply underestimated his own exhaustion. He had not even reached half of the mileage - and the first marathon would be the easiest. There was no way he could run the second and third marathons at a faster pace. I thought my role would be to explain to his parents what all had happened and why. I thought it was over.

Half an hour later, his parents arrived and went straight upstairs to Ashton's room. Doug and I sat in the living room wringing our hands, unsure of what was going to happen. We spoke to each other in quieted voices, almost rehearsing how we were going to explain it to them. Finally, we saw them descending the stairs and taking notice of us in the living room. His mother smiled at me warmly, offered her hand and said "Hi, I'm Julia." I introduced myself, and she walked toward the kitchen to set down her purse. "I can't believe what Ashton's doing," she said perhaps to herself, "I can't believe how reckless he's being... but most of all I can't believe the people who are making Ashton do this."

Doug and I looked at each other. She didn't realize that we were the ones he was betting against. I stepped into the entranceway of the kitchen as she leaned back against a countertop, and announced to her, "well actually Julia. We're some of the people who bet against Ashton. Not only us. We and several others."

The moment she heard me say that, she broke eye contact and tightened her shoulders. Her demeanor changed entirely. She bit her lip as I started to tell the story, from the very beginning... not omitting any details... about how I knew her son, about our relationship, about how the bet began, about what had happened thus far... about how much money was at stake... about the risks he was taking..., and I remember telling her "Ultimately, Ashton called you two here for a reason. He wanted you two to see something. What that is, I can't say, but all I know is that you two need to listen to what he's trying to tell you." I remember feeling confident in my words.

"You say you're his friend Haseeb?" From then on, she didn't speak to me... she spoke AT me. She didn't look me in the eye again. "No, real friends wouldn't put their friends health at risk to try to take his money. You knew exactly what it meant when you bet against Ashton. You're not his friends."

We protested. No, I said, he was going to do this anyway. I couldn't stop him. He was going to do it anyway. I was helping him wasn't I? I was worried about him wasn't I? I was watching over him wasn't I? What difference did it make whether it was my money or someone else's?

"No Haseeb, you two aren't his friends. It's all about money isn't it? That's what you guys want right? That's what you're here for, that's why you're making my son do this?"

No, no. No...

"Right, well your actions say otherwise. Well, Ashton isn't going to do this," she said. "I'm not going to let risk my son's health so that you two can get your payday. He's not going to do this bet."

Well... that's not your call.

"No, it is my call. I said he's not going to do this. There's no amount of money that's worth risking his health for, and if you were his friends you would know that. You two can find me and come to me personally and... I'll figure out how to pay you. But this bet is over. You guys will get your money."

Doug and I looked at each other. I didn't know what to say. She looked at me like I was a complete piece of shit. The parents went back upstairs to check on Ashton again, leaving Doug and I standing in the kitchen. I walked to the living room and sank into the couch.

I knew that as his parents, they were bound to feel that way. There was no other perspective they could have, really... I could see why they would think that we were just scum. I had seen Ashton cheated, ripped off, taken advantage of by countless people before. It would make sense that not knowing the situation, she'd think of me as just another one of those people. Of course she would. But I couldn't shake what they said. It stuck with me, and slowly gnawed at my mind. The memory feels raw. I still remember it.


---


I'm really tired and have been driving for a long time, so I need to get some sleep so I can get back on the road. I'll finish up this story in a day or two.

Haseeb






Edit: You can find part 2 here: http://www.cardrunners.com/blog/internetpokers/the-million-dollar-bet-pt-2

Entry Tags:haseeb, ashton griffin, ashman, dogishead, 70 miles, prop bet
56213 Views | 53 Comments

July 10, 2010

Cry havoc and let slip the DOG of war

Blog by : INTERNETPOKERS
2

I'm back. It's been a long time my friends, but I'm back. About six months I've spent away from the game. I know a lot of you have been wondering where I've been, some of you are surprised to see me back at all, and a few of you are wondering why I didn't get back to your marriage proposals. It's been a long time my fellow poker companions. I don't know where to begin.

Well, the beginning is probably a good place, so I'll start there. In December last year I got hacked for what I thought was $70,000. I got very sick with the flu as well, so I basically pulled the plug on my thoroughly hacked computer and wallowed around in a series of beds for about a month (because I'm retarded and don't believe in modern medicine). I was in Ohio at the time, and after coming back to Austin I thought I'd get back into the game once I was feeling better and the semester started. Around then I wrote some blog post to the effect of "whoo, I'm back, all is well in this dog is head world." Well, it really wasn't. I played a little here and there, I made a few pushes to try to get back into the game, but I realized that my head wasn't really in it. I would surge for a day or two, lose a little and find myself without the motivation to go back another day. It was kind of bizarre. I had never faced that before.


Since the beginning of my poker career back when I was 16, poker wasn't so much a hobby as it was a passion. I didn't have to try to put in time it just happened. When there was nothing else at the forefront of my mind, poker rose to the top and I'd find myself playing or studying the game. As I've written before, it was easy even when it wasn't easy. Poker was just a part of who I was. But now I could spend a day without poker, without even thinking about poker, and I was fine. In fact, poker became a source of stress in my life. I started to avoid it, and started to doubt myself.
Taking classes at UT and pursuing other things made it easy for me to not really apply my focus toward the game. I told myself "well, I'm just taking a break." A month became two, became three. Around then, I heard about some other hacking scandals that had surfaced in the high stakes world. I learned that around the time I was hacked, there were some other people I played who I lost a lot of money to in a short amount of time, but who I never thought to link to hacking. After seeing the names connected to the hacking ring, I learned that I probably was cheated out of about $200,000. At first that was kind of a relief, in a weird way - even though I knew it was extremely unlikely I'd get any of that money back (I got back a little), it told me: 'Well, it's not me; I wasn't supposed to lose that 200k," as though I could just wipe it from my mental record. But being hacked for 200K was more than just a relief. It became my excuse not to go back.


The truth is, being away from poker forced me to stop thinking of myself as a poker player. My personal evolution was no longer tied to how many buyins I won per month - I was faced with having to composite my own identity, without poker to encompass it. Rather than my mind being wound up on 2p2 drama or getting in the green on the month, I was spending my time just having fun, making new friends, exploring Austin and investing myself in interests I had once brushed aside. When you could make a thousand dollars a session, who has time for learning photography? Why spend time learning how to dance or taking improv classes? The identity I afforded myself made me rich, and yet it was one of scarcity. It gave me no room to genuinely explore who I am.


I started playing poker when I was 16. I mean, shit, my first three months I played five hours a day and was making a Chinese sweatshop wage. But by the time I was 17, I was worth more than 100k and suddenly everything was different. I wasn't just a kid mucking around on his computer anymore; my little hobby, my silly aspirations, and my muddled brain suddenly became important. Since then I have been a professional poker player. But I look around now and realize: I am an adult now. I've grown up. I don't know how or when or why, but apparently my boyhood is over.


Away from poker, I'm no one special. Just a clever kid with some money. But I have realized over these last few months what it is I want, and who I want to be. Poker plays a role in that, but it is no longer the focal point in my life. I won't claim that I've figured it out yet, or that I've ordered my life the way I want it. The road is not straight, and no one has it easy. But my challenge now is no longer to be the best poker player in the world. It is instead to be the best man that I can be, and poker plays its role in that.


Being away from poker for so long has refreshed me. I have a new perspective, a different sense appreciation for the game. And I'm working to carve out a place in my life for this game, rather than letting it carve out a place for me. I intend to go back in with more positivity and respect for what it is I do.


In short, I am back.


This is getting pretty long so I'll cut it off here. Stay tuned though, as I'll have more to write soon and there should be some very cool things in the pipes from me. Look out for me on the tables, and good luck to all you guys out there. To all who supported me cheered me on, and to all who hated and said I'd never come back - you're all awesome and I love you all. And if any of you bastards are in Austin and want to get a beer (non alcoholic of course), you're all welcome to hit me up!

Always love,
Haseeb, aka dogishead

http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_iwJlyk_wVVs/STmyImPpuqI/AAAAAAAABgg/Km-2nurJ3kg/s200/Picture+1.png" alt="" width="134" height="200">

(Oh I just arrived in vegas for the first time two days ago so I'm gonna have to write about that soon!)

Entry Tags:havocing, havocking?
12059 Views | 21 Comments

February 11, 2010

But don't forget to hold me

Blog by : INTERNETPOKERS
0


Hello, poker. It is I, Haseeb. I have returned.

It's been a long time. Since I got hacked and had to reformat my computers, I moved back to Austin, had a flu for about 3 weeks (during which time I courageously decided not to see a doctor because I'm an idiot), and started back up my school again. During all this time I have done no pokering. None. None at all.

Not even a little, Haseeb? Not even a hint? Not even a teensy weensy bit?

No, none. Nothing. No reading 2p2, no talking with poker dudes, no coaching, no pulling up poker client to see if any matches are going. In fact, went so far as to not respond to any PM's or reply to any poker-related e-mails. By the time I had spent about a month away from poker, my poker machine sitting in a box in the dining room, untouched, it occurred to me: "Hmm... I'm not just lazy, am I? I'm trying to avoid this."

It's not surprising I suppose. The last quarter of 09' was absolutely brutal to me, running like shit and getting wrecked, and topping it all off with getting hacked. It not only beat down my confidence, but the whole hacking thing left me with a bitter taste in my mouth. Poker didn't seem too interested in paying back any debt to me. Ironically, due to some fortuitous piecing arrangements I actually made a little money in the fourth quarter. What to make of that, I don't know. Poker has a weird sense of humor.

The time I've spent away from poker has gotten me rolling a lot of things around in my mind. The reason why I wasn't in a hurry to come back wasn't just because it's a ton of work (sessioning, 2p2ing, coaching, CardRunners stuff, writing stuff), and it wasn't just a simple reaction to a downswing or anything like that. I've begun to realize that poker is taking on a different meaning for me. I'm no longer the same person I was two years ago. Poker is changing, for almost everyone. The vicissitudes of the declining poker economy are slowly eroding at our conceptions of what it means to be a poker player. Online poker is a grittier world now than it was two years ago. It's getting uglier and uglier with each passing day.

Here is the insight that occurred to me most poignantly: my love affair with poker is over. It is no longer my obsession. No more in a quiet moment, does my mind secretly drift to poker. I don't crave it anymore. That's not simply to say that I don't enjoy playing it - I've thought that to myself many times before, but I've never mustered up the momentum (or financial irreverence) to walk away from it. Deep down poker always sustained me - even when it was hard, in a way it was easy.

Being great at poker is starting to feel meaningless. I don't need it anymore.

What am I saying? I don't know. I'm certainly not saying that I'm quitting. Maybe I'm just saying that I'm as boring as the rest of you, maybe I'm saying that I'm just another dumb kid who occasionally plays cards. Maybe I'm just on an emorant, maybe I'm trying to breathe out my frustrations. Maybe I can see my relationship with poker clearly, and maybe I can't see it at all.

I don't know. I'm back, so I'm going to be writing again, doing videos, playing, coaching - all that. Playing most days of the week, studying the game, trying to push my way back to nosebleeds. My goals haven't really changed, just my mindset I suppose. I'm going to be re-opening my doors in coaching (so feel free to message me if you're interested in coaching but were holding out). There are still some things in poker that I haven't done, and some content that I have floating around in my mind that I want to produce for CardRunners.

Poker is a whore. We all know that poker is a whore. And yet, the first time a whore gently brushes your arm, or gives you a warm kiss on the cheek, you find yourself excited, fascinated. But if you get wrapped up deeply enough with one, it's easy to forget - whores make terrible companions.

Do I contradict myself? Very well, I contradict myself. I am large; I contain multitudes.

Fuck me, fuck me.


Entry Tags:
7808 Views | 35 Comments

January 08, 2010

Dog was dead?

Blog by : INTERNETPOKERS
0


Been a while since I checked in. I've gone through a pretty interesting episode since I last blogged. Actually, I was really sick for a while, came down with something on Dec 28th, spent New Years rolling over in bed with a fever, and didn't actually get much better until a couple days ago. So, has been a pretty grueling week or two. I haven't been playing any poker since then, but not specifically for that reason. There is actually an even shittier reason why I haven't touched any poker in two weeks.

I got hacked. I'm going to keep this story as short and as bare of details as possible, but here's basically how it goes. A few weeks ago I played against a character from Sweden. He seemed okay at PLO but he played a number of hands very suspiciously - it seemed like he never seemed to make wrong decisions in big pots and there were a few hands where he made ridiculous plays that turned out right, with strange (fast) timing. I lost to him pretty bad over two sessions and gave up, determined not to play him anymore. I lost an amount between 20k and 100k to him (intentionally vague). I never do stuff like this, but I ended up showing the hands to a couple of people and suggested that maybe he was cheating. I was mostly dismissed, but I had a very uneasy feeling about the match.

After another intentionally sparsely-detailed incident involving another player from Sweden, I began to get very suspicious that maybe there was a bug in my computer. I ended up getting an ex-hacker friend of a friend to run a port scan on my computer, and he had me run some kind of packet scanner that looked through all of the incoming and outgoing traffic on my internet connection. Turns out there was a computer from Stockholm, Sweden that had been tapping into my computer. There was no other explanation for the presence of this person, and we even went so far as to access his computer using his IP, revealing a Swedish Windows XP Login password screen. At that point I was pretty much convinced that I was hacked, and (using another computer) changed all of my passwords immediately and dumped my AIM account. I then cut my computers off from the internet and was going to reformat them completely before coming back online.

Well, the day after I did this I actually fell brutally sick, so it took me up until now to finally get my affairs back in order. But, in a nutshell, that's the story. I won't go into any more detail about it since I'm well aware that there is no possible recourse to any of this, all I can really do is secure my computer better and spread the word about incidents like this.

Anyway, FML. Can't run any worse at this goddamn game.

I'll be back in the swing of things soon enough though. I think. The exercise coaching deal went on a hiatus while this was going on, so if any of my students or prospective students are reading this, just letting you know that things will be going back to normal now, so hit me up if you want to schedule sessions.

Eternal Runbad,

Haseeb

Entry Tags:
10197 Views | 23 Comments

December 18, 2009

No one lives, no one dies

Blog by : INTERNETPOKERS
0


Hey guys. It's been a while since my last blog post. I know, I know, I'm a lazy piece of shit, I know that. You don't have to be so harsh. You say that, but you still forgive me don't you? Of course you do, because you know there's something here, you can't deny that. You know we have a special connection. I love you. Come here.

...

Okay, so to start off let me comment a little on the article I wrote about a month ago about Isildur1. It's been one hell of a ride, but it looks like Isildur's bulldozer may have finally run out of steam. I have no doubt he'll be sticking around in high stakes for a while and will show his face again on Full Tilt, but for now we're probably mostly back to the average buzz of high stakes. And, for those who somehow still seem to be miffed at me about the article I wrote (apparently, there are some), yes I exaggerated for effect, and no I didn't believe everything I wrote. But it turned out to be much more spectacular and digestible that I expected it to be. I was amazed at how many views and how much feedback it got. It even landed me a few interviews and a spot in the 2+2 Pokercast podcast! So, although it certainly was laden with bullshit and hyperbole, I'd say it turned out pretty well, and I want to thank all you chumps to managed to wade through it. :)

In other news, I'm now offering some awesome coaching. It is awesome because I am doing it while exercising on an exercise bike. I was advertising this on 2p2, and I'm going to advertise it here now too (I might post something in the CR forum too), but basically here's how it works. I exercise for an hour in the morning on an exercise bike while using my laptop to sweat you playing poker, talking to you and watching your tables and whatnot. Just like regular coaching except I'm exercising. Right now I'm charging a pretty low rate, $475/hr (updated) and have got quite a number of bookings already just from advertising on 2p2 (it got taken down when the forum got restructured). I just want to emphasize that this ISN'T A JOKE because apparently a lot of people think it is, haha. Here's a picture for the interested:

So, spots are filling up fast but I want to get as many students as I can now so I can figure out how much volume I'll max out at so that I can see how far I can raise rates on this service, as I already have a decent number of applicants. So far everybody has been pleased, so it should work out pretty cool. If you're interested, PM me on Cardrunners or on 2p2.

Uh, let's see, what else. Well, there should be some cool content coming out soon from me for CardRunners, but I gotta keep the hush hush on about that for now. Other than that, not much to report. Poker is going slow but that's to be expected as I'm rebuilding and working my way back up. Hopefully I'll be back in the 25/50 and 50/100 games soon.

Oh, and for any of you who didn't see this, I posted a mushy thread in HSNL a while back that got a lot of nice feedback, so you may be interested if you have a sweettooth for BS: http://forumserver.twoplustwo.com/19/high-stakes-pl-nl/poker-awesome-647291/

So, that's all for now. Next time I'll probably have some more interesting content, but thought I should update now and let you guys know that I'm still alive and haven't forgotten about this blog.

Until next time,

Haseeb


Entry Tags:
6226 Views | 9 Comments



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