I got laid off on a Tuesday. Which is already insulting, isn’t it? If you’re going to fire someone, at least have the decency to do it on a Friday so they can spend the weekend drinking and processing before they have to face the world. But no, my boss called me into his office at 10:47 AM on a grey October Tuesday, gave me the same speech I’d heard him give to three other people over the last year, and handed me a cardboard box that was too small for the framed photo of my daughter I kept on my desk. I walked out of that building with a box under my arm, a knot in my stomach, and the distinct feeling that the sidewalk was tilting under my feet. I’d been there seven years. Seven years of early mornings, late nights, missed school plays, and the slow erosion of whatever ambition I’d walked in with. And now it was over, just like that. A ten-minute conversation and a cardboard box.
I didn’t tell my wife right away. I know that sounds bad, but I needed a minute to figure out how to say it. She was at work anyway, and the house was empty, so I sat down at the kitchen table with a glass of water and just stared at the wall for what felt like hours. The house was too quiet. Not the comfortable quiet of a Sunday morning, but the hollow, echoing quiet of a place that suddenly feels bigger than it used to be. I could hear the refrigerator humming, the clock ticking in the hallway, the faint sound of traffic from the main road. Everything sounded too loud and too far away at the same time. I was forty-two years old, I had a mortgage, a daughter who was applying to colleges, and a resume that hadn’t been updated since before the Obama administration. I was terrified.
But here’s the thing about terror: it makes you restless. I couldn’t just sit there, couldn’t just wait for the world to come crashing down. I needed to do something, anything, to feel like I still had some control over my life. I ended up in the living room with my laptop, not looking for anything in particular, just letting my fingers do the walking while my brain tried to catch up. I opened my email, closed it. Opened LinkedIn, closed it. Opened a news site, read one headline about the economy getting worse, and closed it. My hands were shaking, just a little, the kind of tremor you get when your body is flooded with adrenaline and has nowhere to put it. I needed a distraction. Not the kind that required thinking about the future or updating my resume or explaining to my wife why I was home at noon on a Tuesday. I needed something mindless. Something that would let my brain shut up for twenty minutes while I figured out what the hell I was going to do.
I remembered an old account I’d set up ages ago, back when I still had a job and disposable income and the luxury of boredom. I’d put a little money in it, played around for a weekend, and then forgotten about it when work got busy. I wasn’t even sure if it was still active. I typed in the address, and after a few false starts where I tried every password I’d ever used since 2005, I finally managed to get through the Vavada member login page. There was my balance, sitting there like a time capsule from a version of myself who wasn’t sitting in his living room at noon on a Tuesday with a cardboard box in the other room. Fifty-three dollars. Not nothing, but not enough to matter. Exactly the kind of number you forget about because it’s too small to worry about and too big to ignore.
I stared at it for a long time. Fifty-three dollars. That was a tank of gas. A nice dinner. Two months of Netflix. It was also a chance to not think about the fact that I’d just been fired for the first time in my life. I decided to play. Not because I thought I’d win, not because I thought it would solve anything, but because I needed to feel something other than the cold dread that had been sitting in my chest since my boss called me into his office. I needed to feel the flutter of possibility, even if it was stupid and irrational and exactly the kind of thing I would have rolled my eyes at six hours ago.
I started with roulette. I don’t know why roulette. Maybe because it’s the purest form of chance, no skill, no strategy, just a ball and a wheel and the universe deciding whether you get to feel good for a second. I put five dollars on red. The wheel spun, the ball clattered, and it landed on black. I laughed, a dry, hollow laugh that echoed in the empty living room. Of course. Of course it landed on black. That was the kind of day I was having. I put five more on red. Black again. Ten dollars gone. I was down to forty-three, and I felt that old familiar urge to chase, to double down, to try to win back what I’d lost. But I didn’t. I sat back, took a breath, and asked myself what I was doing. I was sitting in my living room at noon on a Tuesday, watching a cartoon ball bounce around a cartoon wheel, trying to outrun the fact that my life had just changed in a way I wasn’t ready for. This wasn’t about the money. This was about not wanting to feel what I was feeling.
So I stopped. I closed the roulette table, took a sip of water, and just sat there for a minute. Then I found a blackjack table. Not because I’m a card counter or some kind of savant, but because blackjack requires just enough thinking to keep your brain occupied without requiring the kind of focus that I didn’t have. It’s the Goldilocks game of casino gambling. Not too mindless, not too complicated. Just right for a guy who’d just been laid off and needed to occupy the space between panic and numbness.
I started small. Minimum bets, the kind that wouldn’t hurt if I lost them. I was down to forty-three dollars, and I told myself that when I hit zero, I’d close the laptop and go for a walk. That was the deal. Forty-three dollars worth of distraction, and then I’d face the world. I lost the first three hands, dropped down to thirty-eight, and felt that familiar tightening in my chest. But I kept playing. I wasn’t playing scared, exactly, but I wasn’t playing loose either. I was just playing. Letting the cards fall where they would, making the basic plays, not overthinking it. And slowly, almost without me noticing, the tide started to turn.
I won a hand. Then another. Then I had a run where I won six out of seven, nothing dramatic, just steady, grinding progress. My balance crept back up to forty-three, then fifty, then sixty. I was up. I was actually up. I looked at the clock on my laptop. I’d been playing for forty-five minutes, and I hadn’t thought about the layoff once. Not once. My brain had been entirely occupied with cards and dealers and the quiet satisfaction of making the right call. It was the first time all day that I’d felt anything other than dread.
I kept playing. The stakes crept up, not because I was chasing, but because I was winning and I wanted to see what would happen. I was playing with house money now, or at least that’s how I framed it in my head. The fifty-three dollars was gone, spent, lost, whatever. Everything above that was extra, a gift, a bonus round. I started betting five dollars a hand, then ten. I was playing three spots at a time, watching the cards come down, making decisions faster than I could second-guess myself. The dealer had a rhythm, a steady, almost musical cadence to the way she dealt, and I fell into it like a dancer finding the beat. I won a hand with a natural blackjack, won another with a double down that hit perfectly, and watched my balance climb past a hundred dollars.
And then something happened that I still don’t quite have words for. The dealer dealt me a pair of aces. She was showing a five. In blackjack, that’s a split every time, no question. But I hesitated. Not because I didn’t know the math, but because I was suddenly aware of how much money I had on the table. I was betting fifteen dollars on each of three spots, and splitting the aces meant putting another fifteen out there. That was more than I’d ever bet on a single hand. More than I’d ever bet on anything, really. I thought about the cardboard box in the other room. I thought about my daughter’s college applications. I thought about the mortgage. And then I thought about the fact that I’d spent seven years playing it safe, staying in a job that was slowly killing me because it was steady, because it was predictable, because it was the safe bet. And where had that gotten me? Sitting in my living room at noon on a Tuesday with a cardboard box and a knot in my stomach.
I split the aces.
The dealer dealt me a ten on the first one. Twenty-one. She dealt me a queen on the second. Twenty-one. I stood on both. The dealer flipped her five, drew a seven for twelve, then drew a nine. Twenty-one. Push on both. I didn’t win, but I didn’t lose either. I’d risked it, put myself out there, and come out even. It didn’t sound like much when I said it out loud, but sitting there in my living room, it felt like everything. I’d made a choice. I’d taken a risk. And the world hadn’t ended.
I cashed out at two hundred and fourteen dollars. I stared at the number for a long time, watching it sit there on the screen, and then I transferred it to my bank account. Two hundred and fourteen dollars. It wasn’t going to fix anything. It wasn’t going to pay the mortgage or cover my daughter’s tuition or undo the fact that I’d just lost my job. But it was something. It was proof that I could still make a decision, still trust my gut, still come out ahead when the cards fell right. It was the first good thing that had happened to me all day, and I clung to it like a life raft.
I told my wife that night. She was amazing, the way she always is. She didn’t panic, didn’t blame me, didn’t ask why I hadn’t told her sooner. She just put her arms around me and said we’d figure it out. And we did. It took three months, a lot of late nights updating my resume, a lot of interviews that went nowhere, and more than a few moments where I thought about giving up and taking anything just to stop the bleeding. But I eventually found a job. A better job, actually. One that doesn’t make me dread Monday mornings, one where my boss knows my name and actually seems to care about whether I’m happy. I don’t know if I would have had the courage to look for it if I hadn’t sat in my living room that Tuesday afternoon, staring at a blackjack table, and decided to stop playing it safe.
I still go back sometimes. Not often, but on days when I need a reminder, when the old fear creeps back in and tells me to play it small, to take the safe route, to fold when I should raise. I do the Vavada member login, look at my balance, and play a few hands. Not to chase a win, but to remind myself that I’m someone who splits the aces. I’m someone who takes the risk, who trusts his gut, who doesn’t let fear make the decisions. The last time I played, I lost. Thirty dollars, gone in twenty minutes. And I closed the laptop with a smile on my face, because losing doesn’t scare me anymore. What scares me is the thought of spending another seven years in a job I hate because it’s the safe bet. I’d rather go all in on something that matters and lose than fold my way into a life I don’t want. That Tuesday, the day I got laid off, was the worst day of my career. But it was also the day I remembered that I’m not just a guy who plays it safe. I’m a guy who splits the aces. And sometimes, even when you push, even when you risk it all, you come out exactly where you started. But you come out different. You come out braver. And that’s worth more than any jackpot.
I don’t know what it is about November that makes you want to dig up old wounds, but there I was on a Thursday night, sitting on the floor of my closet with a dusty cardboard box in my lap, surrounded by the ghosts of a life I’d been trying to leave behind for seven years. The box was labeled “Dad’s stuff” in my own handwriting, which was weird because I didn’t remember writing that, didn’t remember packing it at all, but there it was in black sharpie, slightly smeared from moisture or age or whatever happens to cardboard when you shove it in the back of a closet and pretend it doesn’t exist. I’d moved three times since my dad died, and somehow this box had followed me everywhere, unopened, unacknowledged, like a piece of furniture you keep meaning to sell but never quite get around to. But that night, something was different. Maybe it was the rain—this relentless, soaking rain that had been falling for three days straight, turning my whole neighborhood into a mirror of wet pavement and blurred lights. Maybe it was the fact that I’d turned thirty-two that week and nobody had called except my mom and a robot from my dental insurance. Whatever it was, I opened the box.
Inside was the usual stuff. Old photos, a faded concert ticket from a band I’d never heard of, a handful of pocket knives in various states of rust, and then, at the bottom, wrapped in a t-shirt that smelled like nothing anymore, was the watch. My dad’s watch. A 1967 Omega Seamaster, stainless steel, with a black dial and a crystal that had a tiny scratch right above the six. I remembered that scratch. I’d made it when I was eight, running into his dresser with a toy truck, and he’d laughed it off, told me it added character, told me a watch without scratches was a watch that hadn’t been lived in. It was the only nice thing he ever owned, the only thing he kept from his life before my mom, before the divorce, before the string of apartments and crappy jobs and the slow, quiet way he let the world grind him down. When he died—suddenly, stupidly, a heart attack at fifty-nine that nobody saw coming—the watch went to me, and a month later, in a haze of grief and bad decisions, I sold it to a pawn shop on Broadway for four hundred dollars because I needed to make rent and I was too proud to ask for help.
I’d regretted it every day since.
I sat there on the closet floor with the box in my lap and the watch in my hands, feeling the weight of it, and I started crying in that ugly, silent way where your face just collapses and you don’t even try to stop it. Seven years. Seven years of telling myself it was just a thing, that my dad wouldn’t have cared, that the memories were what mattered. But that was a lie, and I knew it. The watch was him. It was the one constant in his life, the one thing he polished every Sunday night, the one thing he held onto when everything else fell apart. And I’d sold it for four hundred dollars that I probably spent on groceries and beer and other things I couldn’t even remember now.
I spent the next hour on my laptop, trying to track it down. I didn’t even know where to start—the pawn shop had closed years ago, replaced by a vape store that looked like it was also about to close. I searched eBay, vintage watch forums, local classifieds, anything I could think of, but it was like looking for a specific grain of sand on a beach. I didn’t have the serial number, didn’t have any paperwork, just the memory of a tiny scratch above the six and the way the light caught the Omega logo when my dad tilted his wrist. It was hopeless. I knew it was hopeless. But I couldn’t stop. I was three hours into this futile search, the rain still pounding against my windows, when I took a break and opened a new tab just to clear my head.
I’m not sure why I went to the Vavada website that night. I’d never been much of a gambler—a few poker games in college, a Super Bowl pool at work, nothing serious. But I’d had an account for a while, opened it on a whim during some late-night boredom spiral, and I’d check in occasionally, play a few rounds of something, lose twenty bucks, and forget about it for another month. That night, though, I wasn’t looking to win anything. I was just looking for a distraction, something to pull my brain out of the loop of guilt and loss and the image of my dad’s watch sitting in a display case somewhere, ticking away the minutes of a life I’d let slip through my fingers.
I deposited fifty dollars and started playing blackjack. Not seriously. I was barely paying attention, my mind still half in that pawn shop from seven years ago, still trying to remember the face of the guy who’d taken the watch from me, whether he’d looked at it with respect or just another piece of inventory. I lost the fifty in about twenty minutes. Deposited another hundred. Lost most of that too. But somewhere in the middle of the losing, I stopped thinking about the watch. The game demanded just enough attention to push everything else out. I had to look at the cards, make a decision, live with the result. It was simple. Clean. There was no regret in blackjack, no seven-year spiral of guilt. Just the next hand.
I was down to my last twenty dollars when I switched to roulette. I don’t know why. I’d never played roulette before, didn’t understand the odds, didn’t have a system. But there was something about the wheel that appealed to me that night, the way it just spun, impartial, uncaring, a perfect machine of chance that didn’t care about my dad or my regrets or anything else. I put five dollars on black. Lost. Put five dollars on black again. Lost again. I had ten dollars left, and I looked at the screen for a long moment, thinking about how I’d just blown through a hundred and fifty bucks in an hour, thinking about how I was supposed to be saving for a new transmission, thinking about how my dad would probably have called me an idiot for chasing losses in a casino instead of going to bed like a normal person.
I put the last ten on black.
The wheel spun. The little ball clattered and bounced, and I watched it with the kind of detached interest you give to something that doesn’t really matter, because ten dollars didn’t matter, not really, not compared to a watch I’d sold seven years ago, not compared to a dad who was never coming back. The ball slowed. It jumped one last time. It landed on black.
I sat up a little straighter. I was back to twenty dollars. Not a win, not really, just a stay of execution. I could have cashed out then, walked away with the same amount I’d started with on the roulette table, called it a wash. But I didn’t. Instead, I put the whole twenty on black again. The wheel spun. The ball clicked and danced. Black. Forty dollars. I put forty on black. Black. Eighty. I put eighty on black. Black. A hundred and sixty.
I was holding my breath now, my hand actually shaking a little, because this wasn’t supposed to happen. This wasn’t how gambling worked. The odds were against me, I knew that, I’d always known that, but the ball kept landing on black like it was following a script, like something in the universe had decided to give me a night off from the usual rules. I put the whole hundred and sixty on black. The dealer spun. The wheel hummed. I watched the ball make its circuit, bouncing off the diamonds, losing speed, and I thought about my dad, about the way he used to let me wind his watch for him when I was a kid, about the serious way he’d hold my hand and guide it, showing me how many turns, how much pressure, how to treat something valuable with care. The ball dropped. Black. Three hundred and twenty dollars.
I did it again. Another black. Six hundred and forty. I did it again. Thirteen hundred. I did it again, and this time, when the ball dropped into black for the seventh consecutive spin, I actually yelled out loud in my empty apartment, a sound that was half laugh, half sob, because the number on the screen was more than I’d sold my dad’s watch for. It was more than the four hundred dollars I’d taken from the pawn shop, more than the guilt I’d been carrying, more than all of it.
I cashed out right there. Didn’t play another hand, didn’t let the adrenaline talk me into one more spin. I withdrew everything, watched the confirmation screen appear, and then I just sat there in the dark, the rain still falling, my laptop battery blinking low, and I cried again, but different this time. Not the ugly collapse from earlier. Something quieter. Something like relief.
I found the watch six weeks later. It took time, took digging through forums and making calls and sending emails to every vintage watch dealer I could find within five hundred miles. I described the scratch above the six, the black dial, the serial number I’d managed to track down from an old insurance document my mom had kept in a shoebox. I’d all but given up when a dealer in Portland emailed me with photos of a Seamaster that had come into his shop a few months back, part of an estate sale. I looked at the photo, zoomed in on the crystal, and there it was. A tiny scratch above the six. The one I’d made with a toy truck when I was eight years old.
I paid more than I’d sold it for. More than the thirteen hundred I’d won that night, more than the four hundred I’d taken from the pawn shop, more than any reasonable person would pay for a watch that wasn’t even in mint condition. But I didn’t care. I wired the money and three days later, a small box arrived in the mail, and I opened it on the same closet floor where I’d opened the other box, and I took out the watch and wound it, listening to the tick, feeling the weight of it in my hand, feeling something close to peace.
I still play sometimes, late at night when I can’t sleep, when the rain is falling or when it isn’t. I’ll pull up the Vavada website and play a few hands of blackjack or spin the roulette wheel a few times, not chasing anything, not trying to recapture that night when the ball hit black seven times in a row. It’s different now. The watch is on my wrist, ticking away the minutes, and I don’t need to win anything because I already got back what I lost. Sometimes I think about the odds of that night, the statistical impossibility of seven straight blacks, and I wonder if it was just chance or if something else was at work, something my dad might have nudged from wherever he is now. I’m not a religious person, never have been, but I like to think he was there that night, watching me make a stupid bet and then another stupid bet, watching me somehow, against all probability, win back the money I’d sold his watch for. I like to think he was laughing, the same way he laughed when I crashed my toy truck into his dresser, telling me it added character, telling me a life without mistakes was a life that hadn’t been lived in. I wear the watch every day now. The scratch is still there, right above the six. It’s the first thing I look at when I check the time, and every time I see it, I remember that night, and the rain, and the ball that kept falling on black, and the feeling of something lost finally finding its way home.
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