I got fired on a Wednesday. Actually, "fired" isn't the right word, because that makes it sound like I did something wrong. I was laid off, along with forty-seven other people, because the company decided to "restructure" which is corporate speak for "we hired too many people and now we're making it your problem." I'd been there for six years. Six years of showing up early, staying late, taking on extra projects nobody else wanted. I knew the coffee order of every senior manager. I once came in on Christmas Eve to fix a spreadsheet error that wasn't even mine. And they thanked me with a fifteen-minute Zoom call where a woman I'd never met read from a script and told me my access would be revoked by end of day. Just like that. Six years, gone in the time it takes to microwave a burrito.
I walked out of that office building for the last time carrying a box of my things, which is such a cliche that I almost laughed. A box of personal items. A framed photo of my dog. A coffee mug that said "World's Okayest Employee" that my coworker Jenna had given me as a joke. A stress ball shaped like a globe that I'd never actually used. The security guard at the front desk, a guy named Marcus who I'd nodded at every morning for six years, wouldn't look me in the eye. He just held the door open and stared at the floor. I don't blame him. What do you even say? "Sorry your life just fell apart, have a nice day"?
The drive home was a blur. I live about twenty minutes from the office, a small house in a neighborhood that's not fancy but not dangerous either, the kind of place where people wave at each other but don't know each other's names. My wife Sarah was at work, she's a nurse, so she wasn't going to be home until late. The house felt enormous and empty when I walked in, my dog Baxter wagging his tail like nothing was wrong because nothing was wrong in his world. He still had food in his bowl and a backyard to sniff. He didn't know that his owner had just become a statistic. I sat on the couch for a long time, just staring at the wall, the box of my things sitting on the floor next to me like a small, sad monument to a career that had amounted to nothing.
The next few weeks were a fog. I filed for unemployment, which was its own special kind of humiliation. I updated my resume, which hadn't been touched in six years and read like it was written by a different person, a younger person who still believed in things like "career paths" and "hard work paying off." I sent out application after application, tailored cover letters that took me hours to write, and heard nothing back. Or worse, I heard back with those automated rejection emails that said "we've decided to move forward with other candidates" which is corporate speak for "you're not good enough and we don't have to tell you why." Sarah was supportive, because she's a saint, but I could see the worry creeping into her eyes every time she looked at the bills piling up on the kitchen counter. We had savings, enough for a few months, but a few months feels like no time at all when you're watching the calendar flip.
I started drinking more than I should. Nothing dramatic, no bottles of whiskey or anything like that, just an extra beer or two at night to take the edge off. Sarah noticed but didn't say anything. That's how I knew it was bad. When your wife stops nagging you about your bad habits, it means she's given up or she's scared, and neither option is good. One night, after she'd gone to bed, I was sitting in the living room with my third beer and my phone, scrolling through job listings that all looked the same. Same requirements, same promises, same hollow words. I was bored and sad and restless, the worst combination. That's when I saw an ad for something that wasn't a job. It was just a picture of a slot machine with bright colors and the word "play" written in a font that looked like neon.
I don't know why I clicked. Maybe because I wanted to feel something other than failure. Maybe because I'd spent my whole life being responsible, doing the right thing, showing up early and staying late, and where had it gotten me? Sitting alone in the dark with a beer and a box of office supplies. I'd never been much of a gambler, not because I had any moral objection to it but because I was too practical. Gambling was for people who could afford to lose, and I'd never felt like I was one of those people. But that night, freshly unemployed and properly miserable, I decided that practicality hadn't done me any favors. I typed in the address from the ad and landed on vavada online casino.
The first thing I noticed was how easy it was to get started. No complicated forms, no waiting for verification, just a few clicks and I was in. I deposited a small amount, fifty dollars, which felt both reckless and pathetic at the same time. Reckless because I wasn't working, pathetic because fifty dollars wasn't going to change my life even if I won. I told myself it was entertainment, the same as renting a movie or buying a video game. Just something to pass the time while I figured out what to do with the rest of my life. I started with a slot that had a space theme, rockets and aliens and something called a "gravity bonus" that I didn't understand. I lost my fifty dollars in about twenty minutes. Not dramatically, just a slow bleed of small losses that added up to nothing.
I should have stopped there. I know that now. But I didn't. I deposited another fifty, then another. The losses continued, not fast enough to scare me away but steady enough that I could feel the frustration building. This wasn't fun anymore. This was me trying to prove something to myself, to the universe, to the faceless algorithm that was taking my money one spin at a time. I was down a couple hundred dollars when I finally took a breath and closed the browser. I went to bed feeling stupid and ashamed, the kind of shame that sits in your chest like a rock. Sarah was asleep, her hand curled under her pillow, and I lay there next to her feeling like I'd betrayed her somehow, even though she'd never know about the money I'd lost.
The next day, I didn't play. Or the day after. I focused on job applications, on cleaning the house, on being the kind of husband who deserved a wife like Sarah. But the thought kept nagging at me, not the desire to gamble but the memory of that feeling, that brief moment when the reels were spinning and nothing else mattered. No unemployment claims, no rejection emails, no fear about the future. Just the spin. Just the possibility. A week later, on a Sunday afternoon when Sarah was at work and I was supposed to be productive, I found myself back on the site. I told myself it would be different this time. I set a budget, a hard limit that I wouldn't cross. I deposited a hundred dollars and started playing, but slower this time, more carefully. I chose a different game, something simpler, a classic slot with fruit symbols and a straightforward bonus round.
The first hour was the same as before, small losses, tiny wins, the balance slowly ticking down. I was down to my last twenty dollars when I almost quit. My finger hovered over the close button. But something made me stay, some stubborn refusal to walk away with nothing. I lowered my bet to the minimum, deciding to play out the rest of my budget no matter what, just to say I'd finished. Ten dollars left. Five dollars. Two dollars. And then, on what was genuinely going to be my last spin, the reels did something I hadn't seen before. They kept spinning. Longer than normal, like the game was thinking, like it was building up to something. The music changed, a swell of strings that made the hair on my arms stand up. And then the screen exploded with animations, coins flying everywhere, multipliers stacking, a bonus round triggering that I didn't even know existed.
I won't bore you with the details of the bonus round, because honestly I don't fully understand what happened. All I know is that when it was over, my balance wasn't a hundred dollars anymore. It wasn't a thousand dollars either. It was enough to make me stand up off the couch, my heart pounding so hard I could hear it in my ears. Baxter started barking because I was being weird, pacing around the living room with my phone in my hand, refreshing the screen every few seconds to make sure I hadn't imagined it. I hadn't. The number was real. The win was real. And it was big enough to change everything.
I didn't tell Sarah right away. I wanted to be sure, to let the money clear, to make a plan. The withdrawal process took a couple of days, and I barely slept during that time, checking my bank account at all hours like a paranoid conspiracy theorist. But the money came through, every cent, and suddenly the pile of bills on the kitchen counter didn't look so scary anymore. I paid off our credit cards first, the ones we'd been carrying balances on for years. Then I put six months of expenses into our savings account, enough to cover the mortgage and the utilities and the dog food and everything else while I looked for a new job. And then, because I'm a romantic idiot, I used some of the money to buy Sarah the necklace she'd been looking at for years, the one she always said was too expensive, the one she'd walk past in the mall and pretend not to notice.