King's Gambit.
Positional White openings

There is no such thing as positional or tactical openings. They are all wives tales. You need to understand both positional play and tactics to be any good.
Playing a Slav doesn't guarentee a positional game (White could play 5.e4)
Playing a Latvian Gambit doesn't guarantee a tactical game (White could play 7.f3)
Playing 1.d4 doesn't guarantee a positional game (You could end up in a Flick Knife Attack)
Playing 1.e4 doesn't guarantee a tactical game (You could end up in an Exchange French).
So like the author of post 2 said, you need to work on not blundering and tactics.
Thanks everyone for all the wonderous seggestions. @never be clever and thrillerfan. i agree i should work on my tactics however untill im better at them i think i need to try some new openings.
@ziryab thats is acually one of my favorite openings I find those to be some of funnest games unfourtentely it often times that opening leads me into trouble.
@Melvin DouCet ive acually thought about trying that opening out for awhile now. But now that you post ima definetely find a good book about it. Thanks!

i agree i should work on my tactics however untill im better at them i think i need to try some new openings.
Definitely not. Just try learning your current openings properly.

I recently watched a video where the commentator said people who make a lot of blunders should avoid very tactical openings. I know some great positional openings for black(like caro-khan) but what are some for white. Any help would be awesome
agreed, i dont like playing tactical openings very much for fear of blundering. I don't like many openings that dont begin with e4 e5

I recently watched a video where the commentator said people who make a lot of blunders should avoid very tactical openings. I know some great positional openings for black(like caro-khan) but what are some for white. Any help would be awesome
The most important thing you can learn regaridng this is this...
There are NO "Positional" openings, there are NO "tactical" openings. All openings have the ability to be either.
Change your mindset now. Once you start getting into the mindset of "Im a tactical" player, or "Im a "positional" player, you limit yourself. You play the board, not the rating, not the idea what what type of player you think you are. You play the position on the board. If your tactics are weak, then work on tactics. DO NOT make the mistake of thinking there are "positional" openings. Tactics, and strategy is always in a game.
I have to hear this stuff all the time at tournaments, and its always form young players. "Im a tactical player' "Im a positional player" Why not try beinig a chess player?
Well I would like to thank everyone for the advice. It all sounds quite helpfull and i'm quite apprecative. And i guess one big thing i can probablby do is take a little more time per move. For example in the game above the time per move was 3 days and between each move i probably looked over it for about 5 minutes. I think having a little more patience while at the board could prove quite benificial. Thanks and good luck everyone in all of your games!
I recently watched a video where the commentator said people who make a lot of blunders should avoid very tactical openings. I know some great positional openings for black(like caro-khan) but what are some for white. Any help would be awesome