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Daily Reflection: What Are You Really Risking?
Published March 19, 2026 | By Alyx E, Founder of Collectors MD
With March Madness officially in full swing, it’s easy to get pulled into the excitement. Brackets, survivor pools, pick’em contests – it all feels harmless on the surface. And for some, it is.
But if you zoom out, almost anything can resemble problem gambling in a vacuum. You’re putting something on the line, handing control to uncertainty, and hoping things fall your way. That could be a bracket, Super Bowl squares, fantasy sports, investing in a 401k, starting a business, or collecting sports cards. Risk is part of life. It’s unavoidable.
The distinction isn’t always in the activity itself. It’s in the relationship you have with it.
The same action can feel completely different depending on what’s driving it. One moment it’s entertainment. The next, it’s urgency. The shift isn’t always obvious until you slow down enough to notice it.
For someone in recovery, the question isn’t whether something technically qualifies as gambling. It’s whether it activates the same wiring that caused problems before. The same pull. The same need. The same loss of control.
What’s harmless for one person can be a trigger for another. That’s the reality that often goes unnoticed. There’s no universal rulebook here. Just awareness, honesty, and boundaries that are shaped around your own lived experience.
March Madness in particular has a way of pulling us in fast. The energy, the shared excitement, the feeling of being part of something – it can tap into emotions we haven’t felt in a long time. And that rush, that surge of intensity, can wear down our guard without us even realizing it.
There’s also a gradual shift that tends to fly under the radar. Someone who was never triggered by sports or sports betting, but has a history with something like casino gambling or day trading, can find themselves in a completely unexpected situation. Maybe it starts harmlessly with a $25 office pool. But now they’ve made a deep run, sitting near the top of the standings with a real chance to win a lot of money.
Suddenly, they’re emotionally invested in a single outcome. The championship game comes down to the wire. A shot rims out, or a call goes the other way. They didn’t actually lose anything, but it feels like they just lost something that was right within arm’s reach. And that feeling alone can be all it takes to flip a switch. The urge to chase, to get it back, can show up out of nowhere. And once it does, it becomes an incredibly slippery slope.
That’s how quickly something small can turn into something familiar. And that’s why we have to be so intentional about where we draw the line.
Recovery isn’t about labeling everything as good or bad. It’s about learning what’s truly safe for you and being honest enough to act on it with extreme caution. Because every passing decision – no matter how small or insignificant – can carry weight and directly impact the progress you’ve worked so hard to make.
At the end of the day, it’s not about the bracket, the bet, or the box of cards. It’s about what’s driving the decision – and whether it’s rooted in intention and enjoyment, or impulse and the urge to chase a feeling.
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If it starts to feel familiar in an unhealthy way, it’s something you can’t afford to ignore.
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