Thursday, November 26, 2009

Chance

I've never been much of a gambler. I decided early on that my winning streak wouldn't be one at all, more like a stumble. I would enter contests as a kid but was always dissappointed. Bikes, BB guns and other toys to drool over, went to those that Chance smiled upon. I gave up trying in my adolecent years.
When the state lottery became official, temptation coaxed me out of my wariness and I got the itch to scratch. I don't remember how many tickets I bought, but I can assure you that there weren't many and all my money stayed in the treasury. I now think of money spent on lottery tickets as taxes which keeps me from buying them.
My wife and I stayed a night in Reno once while on a road trip. We did the cheap buffet in one of the joints and sauntered over to the slots. She played the nickel machines. I think all the bells, flashing lights and noise must have numbed me into thinking I could leave with more than I came with. I was overcome with naievity and invested in a quarter bandit. I looked at my small handful of coins and hoped that one would nausiate the box enough for it to puke out a pot. It just burped a beep and had no indigestion for any of them. Susan the Lucky though, won a bucket full of nickles and we left pretty happy. However, a speeding ticket on the way home consumed her winnings along with a bit more. Did I mention she was driving? We've since sworn off casinos.
I have never even once entertained the thought of betting on horses. The odds against winning to me seem astronomical. My relationship with Chance along with the inconceivable variables of horse and rider, guarantee a loss for me. You've got this guy on a horse who has to keep his weight down and may be faint from hunger. Or maybe had a fight with his trainer, girl friend or wife or maybe all three and is not in the mood to ride. Or perhaps nature calls in the middle of the ride. Cramps, pulled muscle, brain anurysm. Is he going to race at his full capacity? No. Then there's the horse who may have had a bad oat for breakfast or a fight with rider. Maybe it's thinking it will just stop running because it's tired of getting whipped and wants to retire. Cramps, pulled muscle, brain anurysm. No bob-tail nag for me. Gambling on horses is like feeding them dollars.

We were standing on the platform in Polgate, England waiting for the train to London when I noticed small gaggles of ladies starting to gather. They were dressed in their finery and all had hats of various sizes perched on their heads. We boarded the train and I sat across from the woman pictured above. Her's was much less ostentatious than most, but I wanted to ask if the crow put up much of a fight. I thought better of it. Someone popped open a champagne bottle and passed around the bubbly in paper cups. Curiosity won and I finally asked her what the occasion was. It was ladies day at the horse races and those of the feminine variety with a hat would get in free.
Oh. I immediately explained to her that the laws of probability were dead set against her and suggested she give me her betting money since she was going to lose it anyway. No, she wanted the chance to lose it herself. Too bad. I would have spent it wisely on overcrowded tourist attractions and taken a chance on bland fish n chips.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

I owned two racehorses at one point in my life, neither was particularly fast, but both were beautiful. A trackrat for a full five years, I'm a pretty expert handicapper. The trick is to wait. You may not have a horse to bet for days in a row.

Pierre said...

Sorry Karin, I just don't trust flesh and blood.

Phyllis Naish said...

My parents would go to Reno a couple of times of year after I got to my high school years and they were better off financially. My father and I would spend hours just moving from one bench seat to another outside of the casinos. He taught me how to watch people and how to create stories regarding them. we would spend hours looking at people and each making up a story about how that person got to where they were or how they were going to soend the money they just won.

In my lifetime I would say I have spent less than $500 for all forms of gambling (Reno slots, Keno, lottery tickets, church bingo, poker with friends or any other gambling that involves chance). Like you I early on realized the odds were against you and why throw money away.

My parents had a different thought. They called it entertainment. They did not go to the movies or theatre or other such means of entertainment that we might do. So they were in fact spending their money for entertainment.

I still don't gamble.

Pierre said...

Hi Phyllis. Thanks for stopping by.