However, I now DO have a tangible goal. I want to, and will, play in a WSOP bracelet event.
"Bracelet Hunting" is a term used by some pros, including Jason Mercier, as a hash tag on their tweets about the WSOP, and is also the title of a YouTube series by Jason Somerville, chronicling his experiences at this year's WSOP. It also happens to be a quick and easy way to describe my goal. I want to save up enough money to play in one of the lower buy-ins.
I understand that it may take some time to save up enough money, and that's fine. But as soon as it's close, the planning will begin, and I'll make it happen. I hope that a number of my friends can get there for the experience, because God forbid should I go on a heater I would love to celebrate with everyone.
To be clear: I have no dilusions about being able to win. I highly doubt I would even cash. But I would be in the game, and you can't win if you don't play. And even if I don't cash, I would have the experience.
Every day that goes by, it becomes more important to me to be in the game. And by "game", I don't mean just playing poker, I mean life in general. Get out there, have experiences, make memories. It just happens that playing in a WSOP event is one of the things I have wanted to do for some time. By shooting for this goal, I am proving that I am done talking. Time to make it happen.
Here are two pics from the WSOP Facebook page that give a pretty great impression of what it would be like if I actually, by a string of luck and miracles, won a bracelet. The first is Mark Radoja after winning the $10k heads-up tournament; the second is Jonathan Taylor after winning the $1,500 NLHE:


I will be there if you ever go just to see you do the Ron Swanson dance if you win.
ReplyDeleteOh man if I ever won every dance known would be on the docket - Ron Swanson, Gangham Style, Wubbzy Shuffle, Macarena, cabbage patch, you name it. I'd be like Carlton Banks on speed. And when they took that photo with all my friends I would probably bawl like a baby, and bawl again during the bracelet ceremony. Oh. My. God. Goosebumps.
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