Through out your craps-gambling life, you’ll likely have more losing periods than successful times. Go along with it. You must discover how to play in reality, not in dream world. Craps is designed for the gambler to lose.

Let us say, after two hours, the ivories have whittled your chips down to $20. You haven’t witnessed a hot toss in a long time. Even though squandering is as much a part of the game as being victorious, you can not end up but feel lousy. You ponder why you even thought about coming to sin city to begin with. You were a rock for two hours, but it did not work. You need to win so much that you fritter away control of your clear-headedness. You are down to your last $20 for the night and you have little fight remaining. Leave!

You can never capitulate, never accede, never consider, "This sucks, I’m going to place the remainder on the Hard 4 and, if I am defeated, then I’ll call it quits. On the other hand should I succeed, I will be right back where I started." That is the dumbest action you can do at the end of a non-winning day.

If you cannot accept losing, you have no reason to be making bets. If you can’t accept losing a distinct game, then quit that game and cash out. Do not toss your $$$$ away on a terrible wager looking to hit it huge and get your $$$$ back all at once.

If it’s an awful day and you are deprived of a lot rapidly, then acknowledge defeat and cash out with the 10 dollars, $15, or 20 dollars that you have left. Use that left over $20, have a drink in the lounge, enjoy the band. Play it in a nickel video poker machine and perhaps hit a one thousand-coin win for 50 dollars. Place it in your pocket, find your partner, and spend some time with her. Don’t relent. Do something besides piss your cash away on a non-winning proposition bet. Do not throw in the towel.