It is not an exaggeration to say that pickleball is currently the sport that uses the concept of "breaking tickets" the most. Because as the nature of this sport, it is popular and easy to implement. The purpose is very clear, when players participate in breaking tickets, they want to focus on health, skills training, socializing, and connecting. A sport considered "accessible" is being approached in a very serious way, it can be said that this force also contributes significantly to promoting the development of pickleball in Vietnam.
However, everything has two sides and although the bad aspect does not account for the majority, it is still enough to create debate in society. With sports where scores sometimes stand above sensitive and very fragile boundaries - like the issue of printing or out - the initial purpose can be completely overlooked. And here, as people often say, playing sports is the time to most clearly express human nature.
There have been many bad stories that have happened when "ticket ripping" has been spread on the internet, and the cause of it actually stems from a very small matter. The problem is that when the "ego" has risen, in a collective - sometimes all strangers - disputes, arguments, and clashes are very likely to occur. In the end, instead of the very good initial purpose, it returns to annoyance, irritability, sometimes even injuries on the body.
Is daily life "ticket-breaking"? Yes, it is. It's the break during working hours, it's the time to sit and enjoy a cup of coffee, or share at the drinking table every weekend. The general and initial purposes are both positive, but the results are not always in that state.
Just like excessive reactions in pickleball, breaks can become an opportunity to complain to bosses, speak ill of colleagues, cups of coffee that don't run out take away working time, or drinking tables can end in... hospitals and worse, legal matters...
Tearing up tickets" itself is not a sin. It's just the way each person chooses to enter a period of time that they have spent money, effort or emotions on. Sports or life have a stopping point, "tearing up tickets" helps us live more consciously, cherish more what we are doing.
Sometimes just seeing "enough" is good.