Through out your craps-playing experience, you will likely have more non-winning sessions than winners. Accept it. You must discover how to bet in reality, not in fantasy land. Craps is constructed for the participant to lose.

Suppose, after two hours, the dice have whittled your chips down to $20. You haven’t seen a hot throw in ages. Although squandering is as much a part of craps as being victorious, you cannot help but feel bad. You ponder why you even thought about heading to las vegas to start with. You were a rock for two hours, but it did not work. You want to win so badly that you fritter away control of your clear thinking. You’re down to your last $20 for the day and you have little oomph left. Leave!

You can never capitulate, never accede, never consider, "This is aweful, I’m going to lay the rest on the Hard 4 and, if I am defeated, then I will call it quits. However should I succeed, I will be right back where I began." That’s the most brainless thing you can do at the close of a losing session.

If you can’t accept losing, you have no reason to be wagering. If you can not stomach losing a particular session, then bail out of that game and take your money. Do not toss your money away on a terrible wager wishing to make it huge and win your money back in one wager.

If it is an awful night and you are deprived of a lot swiftly, then acknowledge defeat and take your money with the ten dollars, 15 dollars, or $20 that you have left. Take that leftover $20, go have a drink in the lounge, listen to the band. Put it in a five cent video poker game and maybe get a one thousand-coin jackpot for $50. Place it in your pocket, locate your other half, and spend some time with her. Don’t relent. Do something other than piss your money away on a non-winning proposition bet. Do not toss in the towel.