Through out your craps-gambling experience, you’ll certainly have more losing sessions than winners. Go along with it. You have to figure out how to gamble in the real world, not in fantasy land. Craps is developed for the gambler to lose.
Suppose, after 2 hours, the ivories have brought your bankroll down to twenty dollars. You haven’t seen a smokin’ hot throw in ages. Even though losing is as much a part of the game as winning, you cannot help but feel lousy. You begin to wonder why you even thought about coming to las vegas in the first place. You were patient for two hours, but it did not work. You need to succeed so much that you are deprived of control of your common sense. You are down to your very last $20 for the session and you have absolutely no fight left. Call it a day!
You must never give up, never bow out, never believe, "This blows, I’m going to place the rest on the Hard 4 and, if I lose, then I’ll walk away. But if I succeed, I will be right back where I began." That’s the most brainless action you can perform at the conclusion of a losing night.
If you cannot acknowledge not winning, you have no reason to be placing bets. If you cannot stomach not winning a particular session, then bail out of that game and take your money. Do not throw your $$$$ away on a terrible bet wishing to hit it huge and get your cash back all at once.
If it is a horrible session and you lose a lot quickly, then acknowledge defeat and take your money with the $10, 15 dollars, or 20 dollars that you have left. Use that left over 20 dollars, go have a BEvERage in the lounge, listen to the live music. Put it in a 5 cent video poker game and perhaps hit a one thousand-coin jackpot for 50 dollars. Keep it in your pocket, find your girlfriend, and spend some time with them. Do not relent. Do something other than pee your $$$$ away on a losing proposition wager. Don’t throw in the towel.