You'll Never Get Better at Poker Until You Understand This

How to Become a Better Poker Player

Most players are stuck at the same stakes they were playing three years ago. It's not variance. It's not bad luck. Here's what's actually going on.

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Why are some players still losing at the same stakes they were playing three years ago? Same game. Same casino. Same table. Just an older version of the same player, making the same mistakes, running the same stories about variance, coolers, and bad luck.

And the honest answer, the one most poker content creators will never give you, is this.

It's not variance. It's not bad luck. It's that who you are as a poker player right now is not good enough to get the results you want. And until you actually change, nothing else changes and you'll continue to get the same results.

Today I want to talk about something I almost never see addressed directly in the poker content community on YouTube or anywhere else. Not hand histories. Not solver outputs. Not preflop charts. The actual process of becoming a better poker player. What it looks like from the inside. And why most players quit the process right at the moment it's about to pay off.

The Phenomenon Nobody Talks About

There's a psychological phenomenon that maps almost perfectly onto the poker improvement journey. The players with the least amount of understanding of the game and the players with the most amount of understanding of the game often look identical from the outside. It's the players in the middle who are most visibly different, most obviously working on their game, and most obviously trying.

Here's why.

The recreational guy at your $1/$2 table plays purely on feel. He trusts his gut. He doesn't track results, doesn't study, doesn't think in ranges. He plays his hand and not the situation. He has a good time, win or lose, and there's a kind of ease about him that you can clearly see and sense all the way from across the table.

Then there is the player who started to figure things out. Two, maybe three years seriously into studying the game. He's rigid. Mechanical sometimes. He runs the pot odds, he's considered the ranges, he's thinking about every piece of information available to him. He works hard on and off the table and it shows. He looks down on recreational players for playing on feel and tries hard to exploit them. In his mind, intuition is weakness. The math is everything. And he's not wrong, at least not completely.

And then there's the genuinely advanced poker crusher. 10,000 hours in. Thousands of hand reviews behind him. Real competence built over time. And you know what that player starts doing again? He plays on feel. He trusts his reads. He makes decisions that look almost identical to the recreational player's decisions and process from the outside.

Both are relaxed. Both trust themselves. Both seem to just know.

The difference is what built that knowing and knowledge. One of them built nothing. The other built everything step by step, purposely and deliberately. Their intuitions look the same. But they're not the same. Not even close.

The Four Stages of Becoming a Crusher

If you're somewhere in the middle right now, studying hard, trying to apply what you know, sometimes feeling like a robot at the table, that gap between knowing and doing, understand something. You're not failing. You're exactly where you're supposed to be. Something is waiting for you on the other side that most players never reach.

But you have to understand why the middle stage feels the way it does. Because if you don't, it'll knock you out of the process before you get to the finish line.

Stage One: Unconscious Incompetence

This is where everyone starts. You don't know what you don't know. You're playing poker, you think you're playing reasonably well, and the mistakes you're making are completely invisible to you.

You call a river bet because you have top pair and you tell yourself something like, well, I can't fold top pair. You have no idea that on that specific board, that specific bet size, from that specific player type, you're behind his value range the overwhelming majority of the time. You didn't feel like you were making a mistake. You felt fine. The mistakes were invisible.

Or you raise preflop with KJo from under the gun because the cards look strong. You have no concept of position, of range construction, of what it actually means to put a hand into an early position range. You just liked your cards.

Or you play long into a session you should have quit two hours ago because you're stuck and you need to get back to even. You don't even know that getting stuck is not a reason to stay and keep playing. You think you're being disciplined. You're actually tilting.

That's unconscious incompetence. No pain. No signal. No awareness that anything is wrong. And the only thing that breaks you out of it is losing. Not one bad session. Real sustained losing over a sample size big enough that you can't blame the cards anymore.

Stage Two: Conscious Incompetence

This is the most painful stage in poker education.

You now know enough to see your mistakes. In real time sometimes, which is the worst version of it. You're sitting there in a hand. You know exactly what's happening. And you can't stop yourself.

You know you shouldn't call the river. You've studied this spot, you've reviewed this spot in your sessions at home. And the chips are still going in the middle anyway because something in your brain hasn't accepted the reality of your situation yet.

That gap between knowing and doing is conscious incompetence. And it's brutal to live in.

Here's what makes it even harder. A lot of players go through this stage and interpret the discomfort as evidence that the process isn't working. They think, I've been studying for months and I'm still making these mistakes. Maybe this isn't for me. Maybe I just don't have what it takes.

That interpretation is wrong. That discomfort is not evidence that the process is failing. That discomfort is the process. The awareness itself is growth. You couldn't even see the mistakes a year ago. Now you see them clearly enough to hate yourself for making them. That is progress. Painful progress, but nevertheless progress.

The players who quit at stage two are everywhere. In reality, most players quit at stage two. They get enough information to know they're fish and not enough integration to perform at the level they understand. And they call it quits before the work pays off.

The Student Who Completed 3% of the Course and Wanted a Refund

I had a student recently who illustrated this perfectly. He bought my course. And I want to give you some context on what the course actually is because it matters to the story. It's 292 individual lessons, each with its own quizzes, homework, and concepts that the student is supposed to sit with before moving to the next lesson. It's not a weekend binge. It's a deliberate process designed to build a new operating system, one layer at a time.

Seven months later, after purchasing, this student reached out to me saying he wasn't getting results. He was frustrated. My course wasn't working for him. He wanted a refund.

So I took a look at his progress before I replied.

He had completed only 3% of the material. Not 30. Not even 10. Only 3% in seven months. He hadn't even finished the introductory section, the part designed to give you the foundation that every other lesson builds on. He was standing at the base of a staircase complaining that he hadn't reached the top floor yet.

And here's the part I find most telling. One of his complaints was that the course was repetitive.

It is repetitive on purpose. That's not a flaw in the design. That's the entire point. Concepts don't become part of you from a single exposure. They become a part of you from dozens of exposures across different contexts, with different examples applied in different situations, until one day you stop recalling the concept and you just operate from it. That's how unconscious competence gets built. Not by seeing something once and moving on. But by seeing it, applying it, seeing it again, applying it differently, until the gap between knowing and doing closes completely.

That student wanted the result of the process without going through the process. And I genuinely don't blame him for that impulse, because that impulse is human. Every single one of us wants a shortcut. Every single one of us has bought something, a book, a course, a coaching package, and underused it and then wondered why nothing changed.

But the process doesn't care about your frustration with it. The process only responds to one thing. Showing up for it consistently, long enough for it to work.

Stage Three: Conscious Competence

This is where real winners are built. You're making better decisions now, but every single decision takes effort. Real mental effort. Every hand is work. You're thinking about position before you think about your cards. You're thinking about the specific player in front of you, what you've seen from him, how he's played the last three hands, and what his bet sizes tell you relative to how he's been playing. You're thinking about pot odds, your image, and all other factors that go into a structured thinking process and decision making tree.

None of it is automatic yet. All of it is deliberate. And that deliberateness is exhausting.

Sessions feel different now. They feel mentally heavy in a way they never did before. You used to sit in a 12-hour session and feel fine. Now four hours of real conscious focus wears you out. That's what rebuilding an operating system actually feels like.

Even when you start winning consistently in stage three, the work doesn't get easier. You can have stretches of great results and then get hit with a downswing the size of Mount Rushmore, and the old habits start creeping back in. The tilt, the hero calls, the ego-driven spots where you know better but your emotions override your judgment, and the dreaded auto-clicking. Conscious competence has to be maintained. It's not a level you reach and keep automatically. It requires vigilance every session.

Stage Four: Unconscious Competence

This is fluency.

The player who's reached this stage walks into a card room and within 20 minutes has a working model of every player at the table without consciously running through a checklist. He just knows. He sees a bet and something in him immediately registers the likely distribution of hands behind it. Not because he calculated it in real time. But because he's calculated it in thousands of previous hands and his brain has compressed it all into something that feels like instinct.

Most players think poker intuition is a gift. Something you either have or you don't. The players who seem to just know, who make the folds, calls, or jams that make no sense until the hand gets down to showdown, who find the bluffs in spots that look impossible, they must be naturals.

They're not naturals. Their intuition is compressed experience. It was built through the same deliberate grind that every other competent player went through. The difference is that their process became invisible to them because it got so deeply embedded into their consciousness that it no longer feels like process. It just feels like instinct.

The math didn't go away. The framework didn't go away. It just went underground. And now what looks like feel from the outside is actually a deeply embedded precision operating system faster than conscious thought.

That's what's waiting for you on the other side of the grind.

The Narrative That Does Real Damage

There's a narrative in poker circles that I think is a tragic trap. Either you have it or you don't. Real poker skills can't be learned. Studying makes you robotic. The good players just have the natural talent.

That story is false. That story is a lie. That story is a tragic trap. And here's how you know it is.

The players who say you can't become a crusher are always the players who haven't become a crusher themselves. The players who have actually done the work, who've been through all four stages, who remember what stage two felt like, those players almost never say you can't develop the skills to crush poker at any level. Because they know exactly what they did and what they went through to get to where they are. And if they could do it, so can almost anyone else.

The Blueprint

Here's the most important idea in everything I've been talking about today.

You direct your process of becoming a crusher through disciplined effort in a consistent direction.

That's it. That's the entire blueprint. Not talent. Not instincts. Not natural gifts. Consistent study. Consistent play. Consistent hand review. Consistent emotional management. Applied over enough time that your brain's operating system actually gets rebuilt.

Most players overestimate what they can improve in a month and dramatically underestimate what they can build in two years. The player who starts this process today and stays on it, who doesn't quit at stage two, who keeps grinding through stage three even when it's exhausting, that player two years from now is going to be almost unrecognizable at the table. Not because something magical happened. But because something was built, hand by hand, session by session, decision by decision.

Three Things to Do With This

First, stop measuring yourself against where you want to be. Start measuring yourself against where you were. The question isn't whether you're a crusher today. The question is whether you're becoming one. Are you studying? Are you reviewing sessions? Are you being honest about your leaks, the real ones, the ones you already know about and keep repeating anyway? If yes, you're on the right path. Stay on it.

Second, when the middle stage gets uncomfortable, don't run from that feeling. That discomfort is not evidence that the process isn't working. That discomfort is the process. Every player who's ever become genuinely good at this game passed through exactly that feeling and that stage. The players who made it through are sitting in stage four right now. The ones who quit are still at the same stakes, running the same stories about bad luck.

Third, build the identity through action, not through belief. You don't become a winning poker player by deciding that you are one. You become one by repeatedly doing what winning poker players do. You study books like The Poker Delusion. You take courses like the Delusion Killer Masterclass. You get coaching. You track your results. You review your hands. You study your leaks. You protect your bankroll. You make EV-based decisions even when your emotions are pushing you somewhere else. Do that consistently enough, and the identity will follow. Not the other way around.

The player you want to be is not some other guy with more talent or better instincts. He is the future version of you. Built through the same process every great player has been through. Stage by stage. Hand by hand. Decision by decision.


Work With Me Directly

If you want to accelerate that process and work with me one-on-one, I offer a free introductory coaching session for new clients. We'll go through your specific hands, identify your real leaks, and build a clear picture of what to work on step by step to get you from where you are in your game right now to where you want to be, a crusher.

Book your free session on WhatsApp

And if you haven't used the free Vinton Poker Coaching AI yet, it's trained on my full course, book, and strategy and it's completely free to use.

vintonpoker.kit.com/ai

Want to go deeper? Pick up a copy of my book, The Poker Delusion.

Precision In. Profits Out.


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