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Welcome!
Welcome to the group! Can’t wait to kick this thing off. We will announce our first book, which we will read in September, here in the next week or so. Introduce yourself on this post by commenting your favorite golf course and your lowest score! ⛳️ Cheers 🤙🏻
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New comment Sep 2
It’s been awesome!
Hey gang! It’s been great but I’m having a tough time getting the coaches to join our group and discuss with us. Thank you so much for joining. I think we all got a ton out of this current book, and keep up the learning and mindset improvements! 🙌🏻
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“You can’t have it both ways…” “Of course you can!”
If I miss… I’m due to make the next. If I make it, I’m on fire and unstoppable. It’s a scorers mindset, and while in golf you don’t want to be overly aggressive and start flag hunting, you do want to keep optimism and confidence. Like Tiger said, you pick the correct target, and then you aggressively commit to it. You’ll always perform better with a little extra faith in yourself, even if it sometimes has to be mustered up out of nowhere 😂
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A golfer who fears failure…
“In much the same way, a golfer who fears failure – as most amateurs and mini professionals do, at least some of the time – tends to think about how he takes the club back how far he turns, how he cocks his wrist, how he starts the downswing, or other swing mechanics Inevitably he will tend to lose whatever grace and rhythm nature has in doubt him with, which leads to inconsistent shot making with every club, from the driver to the putter.” The point here is to not overthink things, as too many thoughts just get in the way. I tagged @Aaron Oakley before, and am doing it again, because he was the first to teach me to hold onto only one or two swing thoughts…. Trust your natural swing, remind yourself of the one or maybe two things you’re working on. And then let go and hit the ball. It’s definitely helped me play better, and it’s also helped me to enjoy my rounds much more!
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New comment Sep 12
Far better off…
“They would be far better off, forgetting about their swing mechanics, thinking about appropriate targets and strategy and making up their mind that they will shoot the best score possible with the swing they brought to the course that day.” I feel like this is especially true for amateurs and high handicappers. As much as we may want to think we know what we’re doing wrong… we probably don’t. Trying to make adjustments on the fly will likely only make things worse. Before long we are so confused that we literally have no idea how to hit the ball anymore. Falling back on the practice you’ve put in, doing your best with what you have is probably a much better strategy.
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New comment Sep 9
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Play the most consistent golf of your life by tapping into a stronger mental game.
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