Blackjack and Card Counting Forums - BlackjackInfo.com

  #1  
Old May 3rd, 2006, 11:15 AM
The Stork's Avatar
The Stork The Stork is offline
Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Las Vegas
Posts: 98
Lightbulb team play

I have seen the current emails about getting a team. I am seriously interested in it because I am moving to Vegas this month to live there period.
More over I have played often with my friend and teacher Zen Griffin donating post here. Team play means a lot of preperation. Anybody who is interested can email me or Zen. We should meet, train a certain period before we even be in a casino, and know what kind of role everybody plays.

I am looking into investers I know and will meet in Vegas. Anybody who is serious can email me or Zen. The first thing is to arrange a meet somewhere, when ever we have enough people and money to start even the job. This will take some serious thought and months of training.

Stu

tapstuartwild@hotmail.com
Reply With Quote
  #2  
Old May 3rd, 2006, 01:07 PM
zengrifter's Avatar
zengrifter zengrifter is offline
Executive Member
 
Join Date: Nov 2005
Posts: 17,199
Default

Stuart -

Tell us about your experience and history. Include some links about yourself. zg
Reply With Quote
  #3  
Old May 3rd, 2006, 02:28 PM
The Stork's Avatar
The Stork The Stork is offline
Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Las Vegas
Posts: 98
Default Tell something about myself

My God.. What are you asking me professor Zen.. Do you want to publish my book online. It has about 200 chapters full of experiences. Somehow plain life explinations are somewhat difficult for me but for everything behind the comma I can be sure to be known as a responsible human being. Is this enough sofar....LOL

But I will give it a try.

I am from the netherlands. I came here about 3 years ago being married but truly adoring the odds, I could not swim against it. Therefore I decided to agreed upon a divorce. In 2003 I made it into local talkshows and the press, explaining people that taking risks is something we should all do in order to favourite our personal odds. In Holland I was already a hit being at central station for 7 years guiding lost backpackers into cheaper places or worser for less dollars. Less dollars for a better and high quality joint.

National TV has made a documentary about my life. I have no clue why? That time I was married having naked tourist walking all over the place in my house. The moment I pronounced my first wife that I could love trees unconditionaly it was threated as being a moran instead of a brilliant moment having an experience somewhat deeper than what the normal expectation allows you to be.

I left to the usa and after my marriage with a woman who seemed to like it to much with other man (without permission) I left packed my back and one day plopped besides Zen Griffin highly amused about this 6.4 tall dutch man sitting next to him playing a winning game. Of course he got barred and me the next week. We met and we played 7 months.

I wrote a book what is in the process of editing right now ( excuse my mistakes in grammar here) and will get a site what is made by some one going for getting a seat at the house of representitives in SC. See, I start already better than Arnold Schwartzenegger

4 weeks ago I have jumped myself into a bronze medal at the national championchips in Boston being the first highjumper capable to jump with painkillers and packed ankles over a bar. I have arthiritis. It was the last time but highly amused having the 3th position in the world ranking right now. I am 40...LOL I have denied an operation what made my decision clear. I will stop hurting myself and stop feeding my ego. that is not Zen, isn't that the truth.

My life is going back to vegas where poker and blackjack will goanne have priority. In the meantime I will be known as a motivational speaker for everybody in need to hear that a medal will not give anything besides the medal itselves.

Is this enough or you want me to continue...my book will be 20 dollar and david letterman is coming. Sure it will. Can we now form that blackjack team? For anyone willing to see my site it will be soon online. I will keep you informed.

Stork Stu

Last edited by The Stork; May 3rd, 2006 at 02:34 PM.
Reply With Quote
  #4  
Old May 3rd, 2006, 02:54 PM
zengrifter's Avatar
zengrifter zengrifter is offline
Executive Member
 
Join Date: Nov 2005
Posts: 17,199
Default

Do you have the link to any of the newspaper stories about you? zg
Reply With Quote
  #5  
Old May 4th, 2006, 11:43 AM
Mikeaber's Avatar
Mikeaber Mikeaber is offline
Executive Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Wichita, Ks
Posts: 1,196
Send a message via Yahoo to Mikeaber
Default

FACINATING Stu. I look forward to your book! How long have you been here in the States?
__________________
Mike A
Reply With Quote
  #6  
Old May 5th, 2006, 11:50 AM
The Stork's Avatar
The Stork The Stork is offline
Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Las Vegas
Posts: 98
Smile Call of the Wild

Hi Mike,

Here an article about 2003. Keep in touch. I will let you know when all is done. 200 chapters. At least I will have a nice bankroll when making it to at least the david letterman show. LOL. That provide a nice bankroll. How nice illusion could be. You just have to pick the right one and make fun of everybody else who think that their life is the only truth there is.

I am getting lost myself. Wonderfull isn't.

Be well,

Stuart


------------------------------------------------------------------------
High jumper Stuart Wild is training and hopes to make the U.S. Olympic team.
ANNETTE M. DROWLETTE/STAFF

Call of the Wild

High jumper aspires for American dream

Web posted Wednesday, July 30, 2003
By Rob Mueller | Staff Writer
He walks into the lobby at Health Central holding a gym bag in his hands and a story in his heart.

He is lean, 6-foot-5, with a chiseled European face, steel blue eyes and scraggly blonde hair, and he stands out in the crowd of sweaty middle-age businessmen pedaling away on LifeCycles for a lunchtime workout.

He looks like a world-class athlete because that's what he is, an accomplished Dutch-born high jumper chasing an American dream.

He came to the United States nine months ago to marry an American girl, a Medical College of Georgia student he met in Holland, and also to train with the hopes of making the U.S. Olympic Track and Field team.

But there is more to Stuart Wild than meets the eye.

"I am not normal, nor do I wish to be normal," Wild said as he straddles a weight bench before an early afternoon training session. "If you strive to use your full potential as a human being, you can't be normal."

For the 37-year-old Wild, normalcy has never really been an option.

Born in Holland and the son of a rape victim, he was given up for adoption.He spent the first year of his life in an Amsterdam children's hospital.

Adopted as an infant by a young Dutch couple, he was given the name Paul Broekhuizen, a name he says never felt like his own.

The self-proclaimed "black sheep" of the family, he was rejected by his adoptive father, tortured throughout his young life by his own conception, driven to the verge of suicide one day when he was only 19.

In a way, Paul Broekhuizen died that day.

Seventeen years later, he changed his name and changed his life.

Stuart Wild was born, and life has never been better.

"Many people don't dare allow themselves to change, but I knew I had to change everything," Wild said. "I have gone through what you would call a transformation. I always knew who I am inside. As a person, if you are not happy, you must be willing to be a transformation to grow and to find your happiness."

For Wild, this transformation and his ongoing pursuit of happiness, goes beyond competing, winning or claiming a spot on the U.S. Track and Field team.

High jumping, Wild says, is only part of his story.

He became a Christian four weeks ago because, "I don't know why, it just happened, and I am happy because of it."

He works as a dishwasher at a local restaurant and "I do my very best and take as much pride washing dishes as I would any big bucks job."

He is a card-counting expert who makes extra cash playing high-stakes poker on the Internet because, "I like doing things that others are afraid to do."

And he will marry Leanne Buckner in August because, "I love her a lot and helped make her aware of how beautiful a person she is. I feel blessed because of her."

Above all, his sport, he says, is only one small part of the person he has become.

"I don't really care about how high I jump; I only care about enjoying the moment I am in," Wild said."You don't need to beat anybody else, for if you focus on beating everybody else, you have already beaten yourself. This is what I feel I can give to people.

"So many people are focused on being a champion or making the big bucks in their jobs, or whatever, and once they become a champion, they realize they have nothing. I would like to help people to see what I have seen."

Which is why Wild looks down the road and sees himself not as am athlete, but as something more. Something kind of like a "spiritual adviser, coach, and motivational speaker," he says.

"You don't see many like Stuart around the gym," said Harry Mercer, a certified strength and conditioning coach who works with Wild. "When you have a certain, strong spiritual outlook on life, like Stuart does, you can free yourself from certain restrictions you have, and I think that certainly helps him with his jumping."

As for his quest to revive his high jumping career at 37, that is only a small part of his American dream.

Wild hopes to volunteer his services to local high school track teams that not only hope to develop young athletes, but also young spirits.

"I feel with my transformation as a person, that I can work as a motivational speaker and work as coach to really help people," he said. I had kind of a rough childhood, and now I am at this point in my life where I am happy. I think I can help others to see what I have seen."

Mercer believes Wild can do just about anything he sets his mind to do, including making his Olympic dream come true.

"He's got the genetics to begin with - the bones and muscle and connective tissue - but he has an enormous attitude on life that makes a big difference," Mercer said. "He's one of these people who can almost defy gravity, because he has the mental attitude and courage to completely let go and through himself up at the bar. There's no fear."

Facing the fear of clearing a 7-foot-4 high bar, Wild says, is much like fearing, and ultimately clearing, life's many hurdles.

"Being able to step into change and trusting without knowing the outcome is the only formula that makes a successful person, feeling special without the need to be in the spotlights," reads the signature to one of Wild's recent e-mails. "That jump is a final jump we need to make, all of us."

About Stuart Wild

Who/what: A native of Holland, Wild is a high jumper who now lives and trains in Augusta. Wild and his fiancee, MCG student Leanne Buckner, will marry in three weeks, making him a U.S. citizen. He hopes to compete in the national events and qualify for the U.S. Olympic Track and Field team. The 37-year-old Wild, who said he overcame a difficult childhood, hopes to draw from his past experience to help others as a motivational speaker, as well as to volunteer with area schools as a track coach. He also hopes to raise money for local homeless shelters by selling T-shirts with inspirational and motivational messages.

When/Where: Wild trains daily at Health Central and practices his jumps at Paine College.

Why: "I feel with my transformation as a person, that I can work as a motivational speaker and work as coach to really help people," Wild said. "I had kind of a rough childhood, and now I am at this point in my life where I am happy. I think I can help others to see what I have seen."

On the Web: www.tapstuartwild.com.
Reply With Quote
  #7  
Old May 5th, 2006, 03:48 PM
jetace's Avatar
jetace jetace is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Medford, OR
Posts: 146
Default

Very inspirational story Stuart, thanks for sharing!!!
Reply With Quote
  #8  
Old May 5th, 2006, 06:39 PM
E-town-guy E-town-guy is offline
Executive Member
 
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Edmonton Alberta
Posts: 517
Default

Did you ever compete in the olympics with the Dutch national team?
Reply With Quote
  #9  
Old May 6th, 2006, 07:53 AM
The Stork's Avatar
The Stork The Stork is offline
Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Las Vegas
Posts: 98
Default Relating Olympics

Hi E-town guy.

I haven't made the olympic team in Holland. I never had coach either. the conditions according to sport here in the US are so much better. Hopefully I got something done with my ankles, so I can jump next year about 6.7 6.8 That would not be bad being 41...lol We will see. Would be nice combination. Playing blackjack and jumping over a bar. Something else.. Zen already considered running at the strip a good way to stay fit. You know running from one joint to the other.

Life is sweet isn't it. Just live it.

Stu
Reply With Quote
  #10  
Old May 7th, 2006, 06:47 AM
Quper Quper is offline
Member
 
Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 13
Default Counting system

Hi Stuard, greate initiative. I was wondering what counting system your team are going to use.
Reply With Quote
Reply

Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -6. The time now is 07:01 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2009, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright 2005-2009 Bayview Strategies LLC