Dear Dad: I am getting a little jammed up here with work. Any chance you can lend a helping hand? Your son, Nicholas?

 

Today??I must bid you a fond farewell after having the pleasure of writing this column for 20 years. It is?enough to wonder whether I am quitting too soon or if I stayed at the fair too long. For some of you, I am sure it’s the latter. After all, how many times can I respond to “Do the casinos cheat” or, explain to readers “It’s all random. They pay you less than true odds, and that’s how they make their money.”

 

So why leave the best job in the world after 20 years? To help the son who is going to pick out my retirement home.?I am undertaking what most parents would love to do but for a multitude of reasons can’t: lend a helping hand in the career of their child.

 

Presently, my son Nick is throwing front-line 7’s in his film career. His current short documentary film, I Destini, was on the front page of?nytimes.com?for seven days from August 4-10, while at the same time he was featured in the current issue of?Filmmaker Magazine?as one of the?25 New Faces of Independent Film.

 

As a parent, I realize filmmaking is far from a sure bet as a career choice. But Nick’s past successes from the early age of seven when he was involved in adult theater in over a dozen plays, a degree at University of Michigan in theater/film, a Masters at Duke University in film, all the while on that educational journey performing in 600 shows as a Blue Man in the Blue Man Group, along with?accompanying multiple Grammy nominated artists on percussion allows me to sleep well.

 

I am not sure it is much of a gamble when he has plenty of out options besides filmmaking, like, teaching, acting, drumming, etc.?I think it is a decent bet for my wife Renee and me to join him on the Pass Line of life.

 

As for my parting?the gambling business after almost 40 years, I can wholeheartedly say that “every day was a picnic, every night a party.” I cannot tell you enough how good the gaming business has been to me. Fellow employees, employers, and players – degenerate gamblers too – have enhanced my life immeasurably.

 

I am not completely going away. I still have another book on gambling that will be coming out soon, refresh my website (https://markpilarski.com) to include all 1,040 of my columns, and I will remain active in the Twittersphere.?Perhaps?my gaming tweets can be?your source for gambling news/views/tips and some occasional industry sarcasm. You can follow me @markpilarski.

 

As any writer with two eyes will tell you, to see things from an informed perspective, you need a skilled editor to bring out the weaknesses in your writing that are often overlooked. As the High Lama in the novel,?Lost Horizon?notes, “The eye sees but doesn’t see itself.”

 

The two individuals who have edited this column over its 20-year run are Jack Norris and his daughter Rebecca. Their names never appeared in this column, but their eye on grammar and vital input has made my ramblings look far better than they truly were.?The Norrises have saved my bacon, on many occasions, from the Grammar Hall of Shame.

 

As this is probably getting too long and becoming rather humdrum reading, I will stop here, only adding that I have no words to express how much I will miss writing this syndicated column. I bid you all adieu by thanking this newspaper and its readers for their comments and compliments. You have been far better to me than I truly deserve.

 

So, finally, what was the most often asked question I have gotten over all these years in the gambling business? It was when I worked on the casino floor. Nick, drum roll, please… “Where’s the bathroom?”

 

Gambling Wisdom of the Week:?“The smarter you play, the luckier you’ll be.” – Mark Pilarski