I saw this online and thought maybe i should bring on to bitcointalk for discussion.
If a person gamble and at the end of the game he starts to feel remorse is that a good thing or should the person be on alert?
I'm trying to understand what you said in this thread, because you didn't say in detail what you meant in this thread. however, I will speak generally. is normal, if we feel like you wrote in the title of this thread. however, there are always several factors that cause or trigger it. each case, will be different. It could be because you chose the wrong bet, or you placed the wrong bet amount. or, there are also many other causes that make us regret after gambling. in most cases, it usually happens to gamblers who are on a losing streak. therefore, after they lose the gambling session the regret comes because the money we bet is gone. especially if the money at stake, is money that comes from loans.
So, the question is, what makes you regret after gambling, do you feel that you have lost a lot of money in betting. or, you really can't gamble and then you regret it. This question is relatively complex, according to the situation you are facing. for us, it is commonplace. because psychologically, people are often provoked by their emotions and regret what they have done. after normalcy, everything is back to normal.
Rollercoasters of remorse that ripple post-wager, mate, are valuable chances to level up, to educate oneself. It ain't as cut-and-dry as "I've watched my dosh disappear into thin air, and so I'm gutted." It's a crisscrossing game of chess between the mind's machinations, the weight of your wallet, and the pillars of your persona.
That gnawing grief gnawing at your gut could very well be the whistle blower, signalling the time to rethink your footwork in this pitch of probability. Perhaps, you've tossed caution to the wind, bid farewell to your budget or launched into a punt sans the due diligence on the odds. Or, perchance, you were caught in the beautiful game's whirlwind, and now you're grappling with a rude awakening in the afterglow of the adrenaline high.
Yet, there's an angle to this remorse that can be boiled down to a simple offside between dreams and the stark gaffer of reality. If you entered the game with a victor's laurel in mind, only to stumble out with a loss, that dissonance can throw your emotional state into a tailspin.
So, what's the money shot here, folks? Channel this remorse, steer it into redefining your strategy on the gambling green or coming to the humbling realization that perhaps this isn't your cuppa.