It’s the habit that’s nasty, not the people. You don’t have any weaknesses?
The smokers smell like the cigarettes. So I gotta disagree with you there.

It’s the habit that’s nasty, not the people. You don’t have any weaknesses?
It’s the habit that’s nasty, not the people. You don’t have any weaknesses?
They are attempting to inflict their nasty habit on us.
My best friend tried to get me playing pool several years ago, but the private club that he (and now I) belongs to was still allowing smoking. Once they changed to non-smoking 2 and 1/2 years ago, I took him up on his offer to teach me.
There was no way I could stay in that room for any amount of time, the stench was far too much. I would have to take a shower once I got home, and get my clothes into the washing machine right away. The smell of it was enough to fill up both my wife and one of my children. And that is supposed to be an attraction that makes one want to play pool? Pool is dying because more people can't go home smelling like that? I think not.
I've said it in these threads before, after some time passes once a smoking ban takes place, people get used to it. At least they did here in Maine. People still go out. People still bowl, they still play pool, they still go to restaurants. We have probably double the number of restaurants now as we did before the ban, and they're almost always busy, certainly on the weekends. We have the same number of bowling alleys, and they are always busy on league nights. We have at least as many bars/night clubs as we did before the ban. There are about the same number of places to play pool, give or take that one pool room that keeps opening and closing every year or two. (Rent is the major issue that room faces, as the landlord asks way too much, yet folks keep trying to make a go of it.)
People here know they have to go outside to smoke, and it's accepted. I bet that over half the players in our league smoke, and it doesn't slow down play very often. (Yes, once in a while someone will be outside when it's their turn to play, but I have yet to see someone take a break in their league match to go and smoke.)
There is alot going wrong with pool these days. To blame it on smoking bans seems rather short sighted, and selfish, to be blunt.
There is nothing worse than coming home smelling like a dirty wet sock. I smoked for 10 of my 50 years. I haven't smoked in 10 years. What a difference it made in my life to stop. I will say without hesitation that smokers are a smelly, nasty class of people. Good riddance to cigarettes...and to anyone who is too weak to stop.
Muscle up the strength to break free from the nasty carcinogen and enjoy the clean life again. Until then stop whining and let the rest of us enjoy the game without having to deal with your nasty habit.
Poolmouse
Taco said:You don’t have any weaknesses?
That never happened.
I drove through Maine yesterday and stopped by TJs in waterville. It was a saturday night between 5:30pm and 7:00pm and I was the only person playing pool.
There used to be waiting lines in pool halls on saturday nights. Now the pool hall is a ghost town. I don't see how pool halls are going to survive even in maine where you say restaurants, bowling alleys, and bars are still doing well.
I wish I was wrong, but I don't think there will be any pool halls left in a decade or so to play in at least not in the Northeast except for maybe Snookers in RI.
I wish I was wrong, but I don't think there will be any pool halls left in a decade or so to play in at least not in the Northeast except for maybe Snookers in RI.
Amsterdam Billiards charges $20/hr on weekends an there is always a line. Non smoking for many years now.
If your poolroom isn't making money I'd look elsewhere for a reason. It ain't the no smoking law that's the problem. Learn to adapt the business to the changing times.
Well yeah, but there's nothing else to do in NYC. :wink:
Have you tried wearing shoes when you go out?There is nothing worse than coming home smelling like a dirty wet sock.
It happens every time a smoker lights up in a poolroom.
This is what has suprised me. The non-smokers would have you believe that they want to be around pool without smoke. That is only partially true. They primarily want to be around smokers and have them not smoke.
It's not surprising if you study interaction. You don't have to go to school or take a graduate course, just watch what people do with an open mind. The most insecure of all will rail against something as long as they have backing to do so. It may start out as, "I have a problem with..." and then grow if they find an audience.
The age of, "Everyone has a soapbox called the internet", makes them think they have a bigger following than they truly do. It takes someone more than merely confident to say, "I don't really care" and walk away. So the anti-smoking advocates and internet bloggers garner support but still need that group to get mad at. It's genetic competition in the digital age. If they lose the people they want to demonstrate superiority over, they need to go somewhere else. It's all just an attempt to disguise their own shortcomings.
Like Earl, they may have a point somewhere in there, but 99% of it is rambling.
This is what has suprised me. The non-smokers would have you believe that they want to be around pool without smoke. That is only partially true. They primarily want to be around smokers and have them not smoke.
When NY started out with an interim comprimise for their ban, a poolroom had to divide their room and make a non-smoking area with perminent walls and seperate ventilation. The non-smoking areas were empty. All the non-smokers were in the smoking area. What a waste.
Now ten years later, the whole place must be non-smoking and the whole place is empty. (I am thinking of one room in particular. This guy is a 30 year man in the business. After 20 years of increase, he points to an exact date his revenues went into decline. This could just be anecdotal.)