Learning about the Raw Food Diet
Sunday, December 26, 2010 4:58:30 AM
I can totally relate. I had to go through this phase while learning about the raw food diet. I was exposed to an explosion of ideas that seemed like it would take years to sort out.
My advice is to prioritize what's most important, and work on making the grosser adjustments first. Then hack away at the finer adjustments over a period of years.
For example, going 100% raw and making it stick was the most important change. Getting the right balance of fruit, fat, and greens was more important than learning about the benefits of goji berries.
In poker you can prioritize your learning by what you expect will generate the greatest increase in your avg winnings. Some poker skills are very subtle and don't come up very often, but you can get hooked into investing a lot of time in them for little payoff.
When I first learned LLHE, the most important skills for me to learn were knowing which hands to play in each position, playing tight-aggressive, and being able to figure out when I was very likely beaten after the flop. Just working on those basics was enough to make me a winning player. I never pursued poker beyond the low limits though. The tourist players that Vegas attracts aren't much of a challenge to beat, but it was fun to at least get the basics down and be able to have the hobby pay for itself.
An old friend of mine became a successful poker pro. He hates the lifestyle, but he's making too much money at it to be able to easily quit. A lot of people who get good at poker seem to feel trapped by it. So be careful that this is a path you really want to pursue.
This article was written by Steve Pavlina as a forum post. I'm just sharing his wisdom while putting up my links below to get link juice. You can find him on StevePavlina.com
Tapping Barcelona
Hipnosis Barcelona
Buy Diamonds Online
HostGator
Blood Oranges
Reiki Barcelona
Meditacion Barcelona
Yoga Barcelona
Shiatsu Barcelona
Hipnosis Barcelona
Coaching Barcelona
Tai Chi Barcelona
Tantra Barcelona
My advice is to prioritize what's most important, and work on making the grosser adjustments first. Then hack away at the finer adjustments over a period of years.
For example, going 100% raw and making it stick was the most important change. Getting the right balance of fruit, fat, and greens was more important than learning about the benefits of goji berries.
In poker you can prioritize your learning by what you expect will generate the greatest increase in your avg winnings. Some poker skills are very subtle and don't come up very often, but you can get hooked into investing a lot of time in them for little payoff.
When I first learned LLHE, the most important skills for me to learn were knowing which hands to play in each position, playing tight-aggressive, and being able to figure out when I was very likely beaten after the flop. Just working on those basics was enough to make me a winning player. I never pursued poker beyond the low limits though. The tourist players that Vegas attracts aren't much of a challenge to beat, but it was fun to at least get the basics down and be able to have the hobby pay for itself.
An old friend of mine became a successful poker pro. He hates the lifestyle, but he's making too much money at it to be able to easily quit. A lot of people who get good at poker seem to feel trapped by it. So be careful that this is a path you really want to pursue.
This article was written by Steve Pavlina as a forum post. I'm just sharing his wisdom while putting up my links below to get link juice. You can find him on StevePavlina.com
Tapping Barcelona
Hipnosis Barcelona
Buy Diamonds Online
HostGator
Blood Oranges
Reiki Barcelona
Meditacion Barcelona
Yoga Barcelona
Shiatsu Barcelona
Hipnosis Barcelona
Coaching Barcelona
Tai Chi Barcelona
Tantra Barcelona

