Watch before labeling
I try not to label a player from one hand. One strange play can be a mistake, a plan, a distraction, or a spot I misunderstood. Instead of labeling quickly, I write observed actions: opened many hands from early seats, checked strong hands twice, folded often to turn pressure, talked through decisions, or changed speed in bigger pots. Observations age better than insults.
Table texture changes
A table can change after one seat opens, one active player leaves, or one quiet player starts applying pressure. My old mistake was using a note from thirty minutes ago as if nothing had changed. Now I ask whether the table still matches the note. If not, I update the note instead of forcing the old read.
Stay present with one focus
During a session, I choose one observation focus. Maybe I watch who defends blinds. Maybe I watch continuation bet sizing. Maybe I watch who gives up after the flop. One focus keeps me present without overloading me. After the session, I decide whether the focus produced a useful adjustment.
Related deeper resource
If this note raises a broader study question, continue with comparison scorecard habit. I use related resources after writing my own note first, because a personal review gives the study session a purpose.
Editorial note
These notes are written in a practical first-person player voice: the kind of reminders I would keep beside a session, review after a rough orbit, or send to a friend who is trying to play more deliberately. They are not official advice from a poker site, app, club, group, coach, or operator. They avoid guaranteed outcomes and focus on habits a player can control: patience, position, observation, review, and emotional reset. If a reader plays anywhere, they should follow local law, platform terms, and the rules of the room or community they use.
My simple note-taking template
I keep each session note short enough that I will actually use it. The template is source, spot, thought, adjustment, and review. Source means where the hand or habit came from. Spot means the seat, stack depth, position, and action before my decision. Thought means what I believed at the table. Adjustment means what I would do differently next time. Review means whether the note still looks right after I step away from the table. This keeps the diary useful without turning it into a long story I never read again.
| Field | What I write | Why it helps |
|---|---|---|
| Spot | Position, action, player type, and board texture if relevant. | Stops vague memories from becoming fake lessons. |
| Thought | The reason I chose the line in the moment. | Reveals whether the decision had a plan. |
| Adjustment | One small change to test next time. | Keeps review focused on practice, not self-criticism. |
How I use these pages
I do not treat any checklist as a magic fix. I pick one page before a session and one page after. Before playing, I choose a theme such as position or preflop discipline. After playing, I choose one hand or one emotional spot and write a few lines. The goal is to build a repeatable routine. A player who reviews one pattern honestly will usually learn more than a player who reads ten tips and applies none of them.
The links on this site point to deeper owned resources only when they add context. The page itself should still stand alone as a practical note. If the link helps, open it later; do not interrupt a review session to chase more tabs.
How I turn notes into practice
At the end of a review, I choose one habit for the next session and write it as a plain instruction. Examples: wait three seconds before calling from the blinds, name the opener before defending, write down one turn spot, or stop the session if speed takes over. I do not try to repair every leak at once. One visible habit is easier to test, easier to remember, and easier to review honestly afterward.
I also keep a small “do again” note. Improvement is not only fixing mistakes. Sometimes the best note is that I folded calmly, watched position well, or stopped after noticing impatience. Repeating good habits matters as much as correcting bad ones.
FAQ
Is this written as a real player blog?
Yes. The tone is first-person and practical, but it does not invent tournament results, private credentials, or official access.
What is the best way to use it?
Pick one habit per session and write one short review note afterward.
Does this replace coaching?
No. It is a self-review framework for ordinary players who want clearer habits.
Why avoid dramatic claims?
Because poker improvement is uneven. Good notes create better decisions over time, but no page can promise a result.