Humans of Allen: Trent Maycumber
“I thought to myself I’m really good at this. How do people lose money?”
“It was my first time going to the casino, but I have gone with my dad to bet on horse racing for about three years now. My family loves poker and that’s how I learned how to play. Last weekend we went to a casino in Oklahoma, where I decided to only spend half of my 300 dollars. The first game I played was Blackjack, but it was all electronic and got the feeling that it was a little fishy. I started out great, but I wasn’t betting a lot, so I decided to amp it up. I ended up finishing really well and when I looked down I had 300 dollars so I cashed out. I thought to myself, ‘I’m really good at this, how do people lose money?’ I was just laughing the whole time and I couldn’t wait for the rest of the day. Then it started to go downhill. I went back to the same spot and 20 minutes later my 300 dollars went down to 150 so I decided to stop. I tried out the slots which I think are the worst invention of mankind. There’s so many lines and all you do is push a button, so when I was down to my last 50 dollars I decided to stop. But when you lose, you get the mentality like ‘Oh I lost this one, but I’ll just win the next two’. That mentality did not serve me well. I lost the 100 dollars I hadn’t planned on spending. So the next day we decided to go to the horse track where I actually won bets on the first two races. We put a lot of money on the next race and after my research I was feeling good that my horse would win. Well, it ended up finishing last and we lost even more money. We finished the trip by stopping at Winstar where I actually won some money playing Blackjack at the real tables. I was up 150 bucks and I’m a positive person so that is the only day of the trip that I think about. Even though at first I lost a lot of money, I would go back to the casino without a doubt. If I had one word to describe my experience it would be rigged. But all in all it was quite the experience.”
Senior Jackson Stone loves sports, Mizzou, taking photos and the show "Breaking Bad." He plans to go to Mizzou to study sports journalism when he graduates.