by Johnny Hughes » Sun Feb 25, 2007 7:18 pm
In the ups and downs of my life, poker was the only thing I could always count on. Poker saved me over and over.
I played poker for my living from the time I was 16 to 26 and put myself through college. I had no parental support or student loans or job or bosses. Sometimes I had a ton of money, sometimes I went bust. When I went bust, I would open a smaller no limit Hold 'em game for college students and younger guys. I didn't like running a game. When it was going well, I played in really high games with some major talent. That was a lot better. When I got my first job and steady pay check, I realized how stressful poker was with being arrested, robbed, stiffed, and going broke ever so often. I hear some of you guys discussing burnout in the earlier posts. I was burned out on being a gambler full time when I was twenty-six. I would advise looking at poker as a serious part-time, life-long important job but a second job.
Any Internet players who move to Las Vegas are going to find it a very tough go. They don't call it "the graveyard of the local champs" for nothing.
I never worked a job that took over three or four hours a day. I played poker any afternoon I wanted to. However, I often played mostly in the Fall and Winter and then again In May before I went to the World Series. It probably came out to increasing my income by 15% per year, some years more.
I made all the good friends I have through poker. My travel is usually to play poker. I don't play so much poker now.
Johnny Hughes