When playing billiards, white balls, red balls and colored balls roll on the grass-green desktop, and just looking at the colors is pleasing to the eye. When I first started playing, I didn't have a teacher to teach me. I just learned from my friends. How to pose, how to hold the pole and how to hit the ball all start from the foundation. Who knows, the more you practice, the more interesting it becomes. Besides, billiards is not as easy as it looks, and it requires high physical quality. Every time I play ball for two or three hours, I seldom sit, either standing to hit the ball or walking back and forth. When hitting the ball, your neck, shoulders and waist should be coordinated with your lower limbs. I don't have cervical spondylosis or scapulohumeral periarthritis, because I often exercise my neck and shoulders.
What really makes me enjoy it is that playing billiards can test a person's ability of continuous thinking and layout. The key to playing billiards well is to control the cue ball. It takes a lot of brains to consider the trend of the next three or four steps at the same time. I think it's a good idea not to look for Alzheimer's disease.
Besides fitness, billiards is also a social etiquette. My golfers are all gentlemen, so I am in a good mood to invite them to play a few games when I am free.