View Full Version : How has bowling affected your life?
Greenday
01-30-2013, 02:12 PM
I started bowling back in 2004, when I was a junior in high school. I bowled with the JV team when there were JV games and since we only had four girls and it was five person teams, I paced with the girls team on the varsity only day. I met many wonderful ladies there and met my junior prom date through bowling.
Senior year, I bowled a mix of JV and varsity. I also developed a tumor at the base of my thumb that was wrapped around the nerve. Doctor nearly had to remove the whole nerve and I would have lost feeling in my thumb for good. But luckily he was an amazing doctor and was able to remove the tumor without hurting the nerve.
I bowled a little bit in college but nothing serious. Just once in a while to keep having fun. The house we went to had a very easy THS and when we'd go bowling with the lasers and getting trashed, they were amazed with my high scores.
In 2010, while I did some logistics for the Army as a civilian, they had a bowling alley on base and it was only $1.50 a game. I bowled there on my lunch breaks all the time.
Didn't bowl in 2011 since there aren't any bowling alleys in Afghanistan. Bowled my first official league Summer 2012 and finished with a 170 average. Simple pizza and beer league.
Now I'm in a slightly more serious league and I love it. I started getting coaching and while I'm not shooting high series each week like I know I could be, my technique has greatly improved. I practice another three days a week. Combine that five days of bowling a week with quitting drinking Dec 23 and I've lost ten pounds in the last month. I feel great!
billf
01-30-2013, 07:27 PM
First, congratulations on the choice to quit drinking. It does get easier to pass with time.
Bowling has given me something productive to do with my free time. I've become so obessesed that I now generate more free time for it. Bowling has also afforded me the opportunity to coach the kids in my community which I absolutely love. If I hadn't bowled I never would have become a coach. I remember my first 300 game and was like, what's next. I was truly more excited when one of my clients rolled his first 300 game this past summer. On his second and third I was more like, "ok, that's enough" lol.
My goals have changed. They use to center all around my own bowling. Now I want to see more kids bowling, getting bowling scholarships and enjoying the game.
scottymoney
01-31-2013, 10:33 AM
Love to hear the positive changes because of bowling.
I just got back into League bowling this season and it has been great. I am super competitive and it gives me that time every week to take care of that urge to compete. I have a lot to work on in bowling, as my goals are to average 200 in league. I am a ways off from that but I know bowling has given me something to focus my time on that is more positive than other things I would be doing. Like Greenday said that he stopped drinking, I haven't stopped but I drink a lot less than before. Not that bowling has gotten me to stop drinking but bowling provides the social aspect to hang out with people where bars would fill that time before.
All in all I see bowling as something that keeps me focused and looking ahead. If I ever need that alone time to just relax I know bowling is a great way to release some energy and clear the mind. Although at times bowling just makes you more frustrated! lol
e-tank
01-31-2013, 12:34 PM
Ive made quite a few new friends from bowling. It also gives me something else to focus on to get better at. Ive never been a super technical person but bowling is a technical sport so its something different and something that im not used to. It doesnt matter how big, fast or strong you are or even how old you are, a strike is a strike. Also i have to show my dad up lol. He has like 2 boxes full of bowling trophies that i have to top!
noeymc
01-31-2013, 12:57 PM
i started when i was 7 or 8 went to pepsi cola touranment i think in 2001 or 2002 went to st Louis for nationals where i watched a 14 year old bowl a 300 and kinda of gave up on my self i did go again the next year but didnt make it out of ohio. stoped bowling at 15 or 16 then i switched to wrestling where i was really gifted or so i thought since i been bowling since i was 7 or 8 i ended up not going anywhere because of it and kind of regretted not bowling after the fact i went into the Marines when i got home from that i really only work and then would work out i got board with my life then i met a girl we talked for like 2 months and she asked me to start bowling again ( we bowled together in youth) i said yes i fell back in love realized i had to relearn ALOT and been working on getting back where i was o that girl i started league with never showed up and was kicked off the team -_-
scottymoney
01-31-2013, 01:09 PM
i started when i was 7 or 8 went to pepsi cola touranment i think in 2001 or 2002 went to st Louis for nationals where i watched a 14 year old bowl a 300 and kinda of gave up on my self i did go again the next year but didnt make it out of ohio. stoped bowling at 15 or 16 then i switched to wrestling where i was really gifted or so i thought since i been bowling since i was 7 or 8 i ended up not going anywhere because of it and kind of regretted not bowling after the fact i went into the Marines when i got home from that i really only work and then would work out i got board with my life then i met a girl we talked for like 2 months and she asked me to start bowling again ( we bowled together in youth) i said yes i fell back in love realized i had to relearn ALOT and been working on getting back where i was o that girl i started league with never showed up and was kicked off the team -_-
Typical woman! ;) Sorry female site members. lol
noeymc
01-31-2013, 02:07 PM
Typical woman! ;) Sorry female site members. lol
do not open this link if u are not 18 or older or bad words offend u =D
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XXieR34Gy3I =D i didnt make a video cuz title has bad word in it
scottymoney
01-31-2013, 02:25 PM
do not open this link if u are not 18 or older or bad words offend u =D
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XXieR34Gy3I =D i didnt make a video cuz title has bad word in it
Guess I will wait until after work for this one.
Zothen
01-31-2013, 02:26 PM
As the old saying goes"Nothing like a women scorned!" Cool video and song!
Zothen
Zothen
01-31-2013, 02:32 PM
Back in late 2011 I was in my garage and opened up my old bowling bag and as I pulled my balls out of the bag I started to cry. My bowling balls were crack or just fell apart in my hands. I was devastated at the loss of my old friends,that I cried for days,before giving my old friends a well deserved burial. The next day I went out and bought new friends and vowed I would take better care of them and now I have deicated my life to bowling in honor of the cherished friends I lost.
Zothen
Hammer
01-31-2013, 11:00 PM
I started bowling on this league in 1987. When I started I was having emotional problems with depression and anxiety attacks. My wife joined the league in 1986 and talked me into joining the following year. As it turned out bowling gave me an outlet for the stress that was going on in my life. The longer I was in it the more interested I got. I got a new ball and put in much more practice to get better at it. When I got better my teammates showed appreciation toward me for sometimes winning games for the team being the anchor all of the time. I have been the anchor man for all of the 26 years. I never asked to be changed to a different position. I remember one time a guy on the team we were bowling against purposely said loud enough as I got onto the approach Stan has to get three strikes in the 10th
frame to win the game. I had no trouble hearing what he said. It back-fired for him. I got more focus and bowled three strikes in the
10th frame to win the game. I heard him say after the third strike I can't believe it. As the years went by my emotional turmoil faded and
I got more outgoing and better at the game. Then I was just hooked for good. I started when I was 40 years old and now I will be 66 this
Sunday and haven't lost interest yet. In that time I have bowled on three different teams and had a great time with the people that were on each of those teams. It was a lot of fun and still is. My thing always was to not take it too seriously and just have fun with it even on
those bad nights we all have. Anyway a bad night in bowling was not even close to my emotional turmoil days that were way worse. So the moral of the story is to have fun with bowling and don't take it too seriously. There are worse things that can happen to you in life then just a bad bowling night. So do the best you can on any given night and give yourself credit for that. ENJOY LIFE!
Tampabaybob
02-01-2013, 12:33 PM
Hammer.......Happy 66th !! Your one and a half months younger than me and it's great to be 66. One of the best parts of being this old and still bowling anchor is beating some of the "stars" of tomorrow. Last night shot against a 230+ average shooter with "0" handicap. He shot 268 the first game, I struck out in the 10th and beat him with my handicap. ( I'm at 208) second game same story...thankyou handicap ! Third game beat him scratch with a 246 and took total points by beating him scratch with a 703. By the way, he's an advisory Hammer member and was trying a new ball out during the third game that won't be available til Feb 4th or 5th. That one didn't work either !
In answer to the original thread question, bowling has been a huge part of my life almost since I was born. My Mom and Dad both were bowlers and bowled duckpins for many years (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XS8B59xuKz8 just in case you've never had a chance to do this). In 1959 the first large ten pin bowling center was built and from there it just took off. As a junior (after a couple of years) I averaged 188 (remember..rubber balls/wooden lanes) and got sponsored by the bowling center for all of my tournaments and free bowling. Dreams of turning pro were dashed when I went into the service in 1966 (Vietnam war). Did a little bowling at various assignments and got back into it, full steam, when I got out. Started coaching at the house I bowled at and received my first coaching certificate in 1973. 1975 got a PBA regional card, tried it for two years and found out how much money I didn't have, to be able to compete in the 4 or 5 required tournaments a year. Continued bowling in several leagues a week, high average in a couple, and then was elected to the local association board of directors. Fulfilled that position for almost ten years before leaving. 1994 broke association high series with a 856 series. 1996 honored with induction into local association hall of fame. 1997 - 2001 shot 5 300 games in leagues and two more 800 series. Bowled in 14 National ABC tournaments along the way. 2000 moved to Florida and started bowling right away. Consistent 200+ average every year.
This game, as you can see has been a huge part of my life for over 50 years. It has given me much and in return I try to give back the knowledge I have acquired over those years, in hopes that you, my fellow bowlers, will also be enriched as much as I have. Along the way I've met so many wonderful friends in this game and have many memories that will be treasured forever.
Thanks, to all those that I've had the pleasure of bowling with, coached, and will continue to bowl with and coach for as many years as I have left.
Hammer
02-01-2013, 02:46 PM
HAPPY 66th BIRTHDAY to you too. It looks like you had quite a career in bowling. The highest average I got to was a 191. Never got that 300 game. Closest I got was strikes in every frame but the 8th. I got a spare in that frame with a dropped ball that came off my hand too early and didn't get the fingers into it like the other frames. Oh well! So tampabaybob you got into bowling with both feet and then some. For a guy 66 years old you are still doing very good. I just had arthroscopic surgery on my right knee a week ago and am still recovering. I hope I heal up quick and am able to finish this season that ends the beginning of May.So congrats on everything you did and accomplished in bowling. I hope we're both able to go a few more years at least. I guess we will as long as our bodies hold up.
Loyer807
02-01-2013, 09:42 PM
Bowling is helping me get through the hardest time of my life.
I lost my Dad/Best friend in October, I picked bowling up in December for something to do to keep my head busy.
It felt good learning to throw a really good game then not be able to replicate it. I mean that from a stance, I was frustrated and mad at something else then losing my Dad.
It was always easy to just get up and go bowl when things got to much to clear my head and get it off other things.
Tampabaybob
02-02-2013, 04:38 AM
Bowling is helping me get through the hardest time of my life.
I lost my Dad/Best friend in October, I picked bowling up in December for something to do to keep my head busy.
It felt good learning to throw a really good game then not be able to replicate it. I mean that from a stance, I was frustrated and mad at something else then losing my Dad.
It was always easy to just get up and go bowl when things got to much to clear my head and get it off other things.
Sorry to hear about your loss. Have been at that place and intakes quite a while to get back on track.
Bowling is a very good outlet, to be able to get your head straight because it get's you thinking about several other things while you're bowling. If you have an opportunity to join a league, do so. You'll meet a lot of friends and have some fun.
If you have any questions about the game or how to improve your game just ask. We have "lot's" of good bowlers on this site and many of us are certified coaches as well. Good luck and stay well.
Tampabaybob
02-02-2013, 04:48 AM
HAPPY 66th BIRTHDAY to you too. It looks like you had quite a career in bowling. The highest average I got to was a 191. Never got that 300 game. Closest I got was strikes in every frame but the 8th. I got a spare in that frame with a dropped ball that came off my hand too early and didn't get the fingers into it like the other frames. Oh well! So tampabaybob you got into bowling with both feet and then some. For a guy 66 years old you are still doing very good. I just had arthroscopic surgery on my right knee a week ago and am still recovering. I hope I heal up quick and am able to finish this season that ends the beginning of May.So congrats on everything you did and accomplished in bowling. I hope we're both able to go a few more years at least. I guess we will as long as our bodies hold up.
Hammer, thanks. Sometimes I think it's pretty tough to get old, you know waking up to creaking joints and things like that, but for the most part, being a part of this game we all enjoy, keeps me very motivated. I wish I had a secret that I could let all of you bowlers know, that would have you all averaging 210 and shooting a 300 game in a week. Unfortunately, it's a combination of a lot of practice, determination, mental attitude and focus that will get you all to that point. As good of a bowler I was in my early years, it still took me over 30 years to shoot the big one. As I tell my bowlers/students, that big one will come when you least expect it. You'll be so relaxed and focused you won't even realize it's happening or going to happen until you get towards the end of the game. Then it's like, "Oh wow, I've got a shot at this" ! Stick with it it'll happen.
Hope the knee surgery is doing well. Have had many friends go through it and they started back with good results. Mine have been bothering me more this year than ever before but I'm keeping my fingers crossed I don't have to do the same thing. Good luck, stay in touch.
J Anderson
02-02-2013, 02:05 PM
Never got that 300 game.
Yet!
I started in 1975, and my high game is still only 279. Even that wasn't close since the 9 / came in the third frame.
Most of the time, while I always tried my best, I wasn't really a student of the game, and never practiced outside of warmups. About four years ago I got serious about learning to throw a hook and got some modern equipment. I'm still under the delusion that I can get better at this game.
billf
02-03-2013, 02:04 PM
My mother passed the Saturday after Thanksgiving. I was at the bowling alley for the youth leagues and got the phone call during their warm ups. I hung up the phone and went outside for a few minutes. The league was a blur but I didn't let the kids know anything was wrong. I practiced afterward with a Revenge and Marauder. My camcorder was sitting on the table. Knowing what was going on and that I was in a daze one of the workers turned it on and stayed away. It wasn't until part way through the second game that I looked closely at the monitor....the first game was a 300 and I only had a couple of frames left for a second one. No thinking, just going through the motions for back to back perfect games. The third game I left a stone 8 in the fourth frame. My only non-strike of the series. And the only reason I have the proof is because a friend cared enough to turn on the camcorder knowing I record my practices. Now if I could just zone out like that during league I could have the house record officially (843).
Tampabaybob
02-03-2013, 02:20 PM
Yeah Bill, it's one of those amazing things. When you're really hot, and I mean really hot, time passes very quickly and it seems like its over in an instant. It's funny because sometimes you can't nearly remember any of the 3 games you just shot. That's called being in the ZONE.
We all wish we could spend more time there.
TheSheibs
02-05-2013, 03:10 PM
My bowling career has a long history to it. My dad started bowling when he worked at the local bowling alley in Farmington, MI, which is now closed. He in turn got my Grandfather into bowling and he bowled until he was 88 years old, now 95. My dad started teaching my sister and I how to bowl as soon as we where big enough to hold the ball. I don't remember not knowing how to bowl. My sister didn't have that much interest in it but I kept with it. As soon as I had a 130 average, I signed up for the youth league, which was right around 5 or 6th grade. I bowled on the youth league until I was 18 and no longer qualified for it. This was back when it was YABA. I got to go to the YABA state championship my last year of being on the youth league. It was a great experience. I learned how to focus on a specific thing and not let outside noises and other things to distract me. I then joined the US Coast Guard and stopped bowling due to being gone a lot. I then finished my enlistment and started to have more free time on my hands than I could fill. I started an online degree program but still had a lot of free time. So I decided to get back into bowling. That's when I found out that the ball I had was too light and that the shoes I had where also falling apart. But they both where over 10 years old. I did my first adult league in 2011-2012. I ended up realizing that I need to get a new ball and shoes. I finished youth bowling with a 154 average but had that first adult league season with a 124 average. Now I am up to a 165 average and continue to met some great people and have been able to reconnect with some friends from my youth bowling days. I am currently looking at volunteering with the youth bowling at the same bowling alley I bowl league at and am going to spend some time to get a coaching certificate from USBC.
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