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Time and money lost by gambling cannot be recovered

Gambling addiction begins with the tempting winning phase, where everything seems perfect. A person may initially win and get easily hooked at this stage due to the thrill of winning and the belief that they are in control. However, this phase is usually short-lived and is followed by a loss phase. A person begins to lose significant amounts of money, but because he knows what it is like to win, he continues to gamble, believing that winning must follow.When a person experiences a significant gambling loss, the first reaction is to panic and do anything to try to get back the money they just lost. Debt stress drives people to chase losses. However, this only wastes time, plunging deeper and deeper into their addiction and financial obligations. Longer gambling only wastes more time and money, and what is lost cannot be recovered. Chasing losses is never a good idea and always ends badly. It can cause harmful consequences such as financial ruin, reckless behavior and bad decisions, addiction – chasing losses creates a vicious cycle of gambling, problems in family and love relationships, mental health problems, falling into depression. It is important to accept that the money is gone. The sooner a person realizes that gambling is a game of chance and not a game of skill, the sooner he will be able to stop betting. The odds are always against the player and no matter how good a person thinks they are at gambling, they cannot predict the outcome of the game. Gambling games are designed to keep a person gambling with the belief that a big win is achievable. And if at certain time intervals the “house” gives away some winnings to the player, it is solely with the aim of keeping it as long as possible for the gambling game. The player is just a “puppet on a string”, because the “house” always wins. So would there really be such a large number of betting shops and gambling sites if they didn’t get rich from players.

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