I do indeed feel like there is a certain amount of struggle, suffering, and yes payment to be made. I pay mine by being the hey boy for a slew of great players. By practicing racking with some greats. By being beaten both emotionaly mentaly and physicly. By coming back to this mystical green table for more punishment. By playing hours and hours and hours until my hands hurt and then playing more.:grin-square:
By helping others improve there game. by helping the industry. By networking to the farthest reaches of my ability.
All this for hoping that one day I will have payed my dues.:wink:
I cant stand those other guys that feel like there rights equal others rights and get upset when other people dont give them the RESPECT they feel they diserve as people.
Well Im sorry son you may be 30 but your still a boy in here.![]()
I gotta start off by saying this, I apologize for anyone I might offend. The past-tense of "pay" is "paid".
To pay your dues simply means to put in the work needed to achieve your goal. Oftentimes, it means the person put in more work than usual to achieve their goals. The only time the statement is used in the negative is when someone has not achieved their goals (ie., "You lost because you haven't paid your dues."). It is never used for a successful beginner (ie., "Wow, this person is amazing and they haven't paid their dues yet!").
http://idioms.thefreedictionary.com/pay+dues
(amazingly, I wrote this before I looked it up)
I gotta start off by saying this, I apologize for anyone I might offend. The past-tense of "pay" is "paid".
To pay your dues simply means to put in the work needed to achieve your goal. Oftentimes, it means the person put in more work than usual to achieve their goals. The only time the statement is used in the negative is when someone has not achieved their goals (ie., "You lost because you haven't paid your dues."). It is never used for a successful beginner (ie., "Wow, this person is amazing and they haven't paid their dues yet!").
http://idioms.thefreedictionary.com/pay+dues
(amazingly, I wrote this before I looked it up)
Your first sentence contains a comma splice.
When I was learning how to play, very seldom would anyone teach you anything. You won money playing lesser players. But, you didn't get to keep all of it if you really wanted to get better. You took a percentage of your winnings and then played the people better than you. You knew you would lose, but you would learn in the process. You paid your dues.
Sure, you could learn some things just from watching the better players. But, you had to play them to learn how to handle the tough players. To learn to come from behind, never give up, still play your game when it looks like you have no chance to win. You only learn those things by playing better players. Thus the term 'paying your dues'. You 'paid' the better players so you could learn how to win.
Ah, I look forward to the day when comma splices are the worst offenses here.