What Lie Do You Tell Yourself Most Often About Your Betting?

My lie: "I am teaching my children about mathematics and probability through betting."

Truth: I am teaching them that father prioritizes analysis over presence. They learn probability from school. They learn absence from me.
 
My lie: "I left betting exchange job because better opportunities existed."

Truth: Left because becoming too isolated. Betting-focused career accelerated social withdrawal.

New job didn't solve problem. Still isolated. Still betting. Just different venue.
 
Another lie: "I only bet games I've properly analyzed."

Truth: I bet games because they're on TV and I want action. Then I do 5 minutes of analysis and call it "proper."
 
"I only bet when sober."

Massive lie.

I bet drunk all the time.

Tell myself I don't or that drunk bets "don't count" in my mental accounting.

They count. They lose. I pretend they don't exist.
 
Confession time: What's the lie you tell yourself most often about your betting?

Not the lie you tell OTHER people. The lie you tell YOURSELF.

I'll go first: "Betting makes me a better coach because I understand the game analytically."

Truth: Betting makes me a more distracted coach because I'm thinking about spreads during practice. The "analytical understanding" is just rationalization for time I'd rather spend analyzing than coaching.

What's your self-deception?
“I’m due.” Even when I know better, it’s easy to slip into thinking the next run will balance things out.
 
"I could stop betting anytime. I continue because I'm profitable."

Truth: I'm profitable but I'm also habituated. The ritual matters more than the profit.

Don't know if I could actually stop. Haven't tried.
 
"tomorrow ill do better"

never do better

same pattern every day every week every month

tell myself tomorrow is different

tomorrow is always the same...
 
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