Inter Casino
By Virginia Bola, PsyD
I just spent three days in the land
of milk and money - Las Vegas. There is something refreshingly honest
about
the place: it's all about money and it knows it. It doesn't pretend to
be anything else.
No doubt some of the architects think
that their work has some importance of its own: the re-creations of
Venice,
Camelot, Paris, Egypt, and New York. Battling pirate ships and erupting
volcanoes aside, once you enter the themed palaces, they are all the
same:
crap tables, blackjack tables, roulette wheels, and thousands upon
thousands
of slot machines - all promising to give you a fun time while you lose
your money in the pursuit of a possible fortune.
The lure of gambling has existed
throughout recorded history but has never gripped the millions who now
participate. We play state-sponsored lotteries, visit tribal and other
legal casinos, create special accounts for Internet gaming, bet the
horses,
bet the dogs, bet on sports, fights, anything where we can catch the
excitement
of beating the odds.
Moralists worry that a large percentage
of those who risk their money, are those who cannot afford to risk
anything:
the poor, the unemployed, the minimum wage fringe who, at the best of
times,
barely hang on to the basement rung of the economic ladder. They argue
that gambling should be a pleasant pursuit for those who can afford to
lose a reasonable amount, using the money they have earned for
purchasing
excitement, entertainment, and momentary escape.
Who's kidding who?
For the middle class gamblers who
bet on the super bowl, the derby, the occasional lottery ticket, or
visit
the casinos once or twice a year, gambling is a diversion, a fun time,
a little bit of excitement sandwiched between the realities of career
advancement,
building a nest egg, raising children, and doing their civic duties.
The
thrill of a potential win is the lure of proving their ability to
compete,
to come out on top, to better their opponents, the pros, the odds, the
morning line. It is a personal challenge that can boost their
self-confidence
when they win but has few negative effects when they lose because their
real self-image relates to the important aspects of their lives,
separate
from their gaming ventures.
It is those who cannot afford to
lose who become addicted to the lure of chance. Stuck in minimum wage
employment,
without the education, the skills, or the entrepreneurial savvy to work
their way up the social and economic pyramid, they see gambling as the
promise of a permanent way out, a tsunami that can sweep them
instantaneously
to the top, an overnight millionaire. A lottery ticket, a slot machine,
a pick 6 wager, plays no favorites. The poor, the homeless, the
forgotten,
the have-nots, all compete with the rich and famous on an equal
footing.
They become hooked on continued gaming because it is the only chance of
reaching the lifestyle they want to achieve.
A successful businessman wins a quarter
of a million dollars and it is nice: a bonus, a chance to splurge on
new
toys, the opportunity to retire outstanding debts, or expand their
company
with a welcome infusion of capital.
A working-class-stiff wins a quarter
of a million dollars and it is truly life-changing. A janitor, a
gardener,
a fast food worker, a guard - with a windfall like that, they can turn
their back on the roach-infested slum apartment and move to a better
neighborhood
or buy a small house and a new car. They can quit their hated job, help
their families, participate in the good life they have only previously
experienced as outsiders, looking in.
The problem is that it is non-sustainable.
Winning what seems like an enormous amount of money seldom leads to
rational
investment: education, skill upgrades, saving for future college costs
or business opportunities. Moving from nothing to something, in an
instant,
is not an event likely to produce rational planning. For those whose
monetary
and emotional needs have never been truly met, immediate gratification
is the direction of choice. A lifetime of denial demands a certain
degree
of self-indulgence when the means for it become miraculously available.
Is it any wonder that a large percentage
of lottery winners file bankruptcy within five years of their win? The
moves, the changes, the life enhancements that substantial wins provide
are ephemeral.
In the short run, they provide an
exciting exit from a black tunnel. In the long run, such a win turns
negative
- because the dream has become a reality, even if only for a brief
moment,
returning to prior levels of existence becomes an even more painful
form
of imprisonment.
The need to recapture that dream,
and perhaps maintain it this time if a mega-million prize can be
snatched,
keeps the gambling industry thriving and the promises of dream
fulfillment
entice us all, most especially the poor, into one more venture, one
more
ticket, one more chance.
Virginia Bola is a licensed clinical
psychologist with deep interests in Social Psychology and politics. She
has performed therapeutic services for more than 20 years and has
studied
the effects of cultural forces and employment on the individual. The
author
of an interactive workbook, The Wolf at the Door: An Unemployment
Survival
Manual, and a monthly ezine, The Worker's Edge, she can be reached at http://drvirginiabola.blogspot.com
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com
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