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Man hitting a low shot with a paddle on an indoor court during a pickleball match.
Image is representative only and does not depict the actual subjects of the story.
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AITA for booking a busy pickleball court where nobody pays?
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Man lunging forward to hit a shot with a paddle on an outdoor court during a pickleball game.
Image is representative only and does not depict the actual subjects of the story.
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Man in ready stance holding paddle on indoor court during a pickleball match.
Image is representative only and does not depict the actual subjects of the story.
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This whole confrontation, or this whole pickle, if you will, runs on the kind of social pressure that informal communities love to generate, where the rules are never written down anywhere, but everyone acts like you should have known them anyway. Nobody put up a sign explaining the line system. Nobody mentioned it on the booking page. The city built a reservation system, made it available on Saturdays, charged money for it, and apparently forgot to tell the regulars who have been treating the public courts as their personal rotation system for free. And yet the guy who followed the official process is the one getting called names in the parking lot.
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The older man pulling out his phone to verify the reservation is a genuinely perfect detail, because it shows exactly how this community operates. He did not believe that a paying, booked reservation could possibly outrank the informal queue that everyone had agreed to honor without telling any newcomers about it. The idea that the city's own system might supersede the regulars' gentleman's agreement was apparently a radical concept that required fact-checking on the spot.
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And then there is the petition to save the 36 courts the city is closing down, which is sitting right there in the background of this whole story without anyone apparently connecting the dots. Courts that nobody pays for tend to get closed down because they cost money to maintain and generate none. Courts that people reserve and pay for tend to stay open because they fund themselves. The very community that developed an etiquette system specifically designed to avoid paying is now upset that the city is taking the courts away, and they are directing that frustration at the one person in the parking lot who actually paid.
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Building a shadow system on top of an already weird and over-complex system that has so many rules and then expecting strangers to instinctively know which one takes priority is a different story entirely.
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