Monday, September 26, 2011

Golfing Success - A Life Learning Experience

The golfing success is a life learning experience. You can learn a lot about life when you play golf.
You can learn a lot about yourself from golf.
If you cheat or blow up when things are not going your way, such as getting a bad break, you will most likely demonstrate similar behaviors in life. Therefore, golfing success reflects your life learning experience.

A life is a game, and so is golf. You have twists and turns (In life) and you just have to meander your way through; likewise, in golf, you also get good breaks as well as bad ones, and you just have to learn to deal with them.
Golfing success mirrors your life learning experience.

If you can begin another day - not to mention that you can play on the green.
Accept the fact that during the day, you may have joys, disappointments, and surprises. Learn to accept what is being offered to you, and embrace the good as well as the bad. This is the way of Zen, and this is how you should play Zen golf, which brings about golfing success.

If you regard playing golf as a life learning experience, then you will learn and improve your sport. Golfing success is within your reach.

In golf as in life, to achieve anything, you need to set goals.
For golfing success, set some smart learning goals
In golf, there is the 80/20 rule: 80 percent of your improvement comes from only 20 percent of what you have learned or improved.
In other words, you don't need to know everything to attain golfing success. It is like driving a car - you meed to know the basics of driving, but you need not know how a car engine operates.

To improve your game for golfing success, focus on only a few major areas.
Like living, if you worry about everything or worry too much, you will end up not enjoying your life at all. Living becomes stressful. Similarly, in golf, if you strive to analyze every situation, or worry too much about how to execute a stroke, analysis will become paralysis.

To get yourself a good address position. You maintain a good stance and proper posture. Then you turn away from the ball on your backswing that stores up energy. Finally, you release your stored-up energy with a good forward swing that propels the ball to the target. To play good golf all you have to do is grip it, turn it, and release it.

However you become your own coach. As you continue to play, if you are mindful of your need to know and to learn the basics, you will improve your game. You will ultimately attain your golfing success.

A good instructor can do only so much: you have to learn on your own, especially how to master golfing techniques for golfing success. Naturally, a good instructor should tell you what to do and why you should do it in that particular manner.
Then the instructor should be able to demonstrate to you how to do it properly.
Finally, your instructor should allow you to "experience" the feel of that newly acquired technique.

Therefore, playing golf is always a life learning experience if you are made aware of what you need to do. After all, golf is a 80/20 game for golfing success.

Golf Swing Tempo vs Golf Swing Speed

Golf Swing Tempo vs Golf Swing Speed

Is that your golf swing too fast?

It's not the speed, but the tempo, Golf Swing Speed and Golf Swing Tempo are fundamentally different.

The golfers swing can appear extremely fast, because they don't have the correct swing tempo.
They usually have a very deliberate take away and back swing, where they are trying to 'Place' the club head in the correct position. There may even be a deliberate pause at the top.

Golf Swing Tempo, that start to talk about components of the swing.
Swing plane, take away, ball position, alignment. These are fundamentals and separate parts of the swing.
These are the individual parts that you learn, which when combined, give you a complete golf swing.

The Golf swing tempo, is the glue that holds all of these constituent parts together.
The more you swing, with the correct swing tempo, the more stable all of those swing components become.

What is Swing Speed? 
It's simply the amount of time you take to get from the start of your takeaway to the point of impact.
But let's say for simplicity sake, that for you, this takes 4 seconds. If you take 2 seconds getting to the top of your back swing and then 2 seconds getting the club head to the ball, you really are not going to generate any club head speed.

So what is Swing Tempo? 
Let's take the same 4 second swing,

The time you take 3 Seconds getting to the top, but 1 second on the way down, and what do you have? Well you have a very slow swing, but you have "perfect" Golf Swing Tempo.

Because of all pro's swing at this exact tempo ratio. 3 To 1. So you can swing as fast as you like.
As long as you do it using the 3 to 1 ratio.

All you have to do is achieve this tempo using one of the many training aids available.
Most of which are audio cue devices. When you do what you will find, is that you will swing faster than you ever have, but with a tempo and a consistency, that is going to stay solid throughout your next round of golf.

When you use one of the aids, your mind tends to focus on waiting for an audio cue, which eliminates those mind games you tend to start playing when you are addressing the ball.
The ones that get you all tensed up and anxious, the ones that took away any chance you ever had of a good smooth swing tempo.


Fitness for the Golfer


Sincerely,  a more careful look at the professional golf ranks will reveal many well-conditioned people.
Such conditioning is needed to perform consistently well at a high level.
Then, it isn't often noted, but the golf swing is an intensely athletic motion. Some professional golfers don't look like athletes, the fact remains that golfers are athletes.

Given that fact, even the most casual golfer who incorporates the simplest of exercises can help himself or herself shave strokes off the handicap, and maybe a few inches off the waist.

A golf analysis company based in Germany, Golf Biodynamics, conducted a study using twenty-eight weekend golfers.
They were introduced to an eight-week, “5-column” workout plan.
The 5 columns were different sets of exercises that concentrated on five different fitness-related aspects of golf – coordination, balance, strength, the swing itself, and flexibility.

The results of the study were overwhelming.

The group as a whole experienced an increase in upper-body rotation and an 80 percent gain in upper-body strength.
The stability of their hip rotation also increased, resulting in a more controlled swing, and their collective club head speed increased. Think they’re having fun knocking their drives past their playing partners now?

With any workout regimen, the older a person gets, the harder it is to see results.
The younger golfers and women, all with lower handicaps, saw more immediate results on the golf course.
However seniors and bogey golfers can take heart; the sport is a game of inches.
The slightest change any golfer makes can have a significant impact in her game, and will help avoid back pain, knee pain, and other health problems many middle-aged to senior golfers experience.


Fitness for the Golfer

Improve Your Golf Swing

Improve Your Golf Swing
Do The Golf Swing Aids Really Help?

The Golf swing aids haven't always had the best reputation in the golfing industry.
Upon first hitting the scene, they were viewed as little more than gimmicks, making the user look silly while using or wearing them, and providing no real benefits.
As the game has evolved globally, taking on more and more players at a rapid rate, the technology surrounding golf has also improved quite a bit, and this extends to golf swing aids, which have shed their dubious skin to attain a well-respected position in the golfing world as valuable teaching tools.

For a sport as technically demanding as golf is, arguably the most technical and challenging in the world, it's not a surprise that players of all skill levels can benefit from devices which help spotlight weaknesses in their game and shore them up.
The golf swing is an intricate mechanic, but for all that intricacy, it very much becomes rote to the body, which can reproduce the exact same swing mechanics repeatedly through muscle memory.
This is perfect when you have a good swing, but if your swing is less than stellar, this can cause obvious dilemmas. How do you correct flaws in a swing that's so ingrained, it performs of its own accord?

The answer is to use swing aids which force the user into correct positions.
The body has no choice but to adapt the new positions, and through enough use, this new form will eventually take the place of the old, giving the user the ability to successfully reproduce without the help of the aid.
The aids can extend to all areas of the swing, be it the swing plane itself, the positioning of the hands and wrists, proper alignment with the ball and target, and much more.

The first step in determining which golf swing aid would be of the most use to you is to identify where your trouble areas are.
A second set of eyes is useful in this situation, be it a friend or family member, or a golfing instructor.
Another possible method is to record video of yourself from different angles during your swing, so you can see your motion in a different light.

Once you know your weaknesses, you can look into a beneficial golf aid which targets that weakness.
Take the time to read up on the different products, and especially the reviews of those products from other golfers to determine which one sounds right for you.
Most golf swing aids are available for purchase online, often at a fraction of the price of what you'd pay at a pro shop of sporting goods store.
Be sure to share your experience with the device with other golfers as well, so they know which products are worth their weight in golf balls. Your golfing buddies on the other hand, well, we'll leave that up to you.
Bragging rights go a long way on and off the golf course, and it may be that some things are better kept secret from your friends.

Basis Golf Etiquette


A Golf is considered a gentleman's game and since this is so, exact policy of etiquette in playing apply. Even though these are not hard and fast rules, they show that the person practicing these has respect not only for other golfers, but also for the game itself.

Here are just some general policies of golf etiquette practiced at all levels whether they're amateur or professional. It is then followed by some certain rules at particular times throughout a game.

The Quiet

= Keeping quiet as a person steps up to the ball is a sign of respect for the player as you are allow him/her to concentrate.
= A golf course is not a race track. Do not run as this will distract and bother other players.

The Safety

= Before swinging, always check for other people or objects in the area your ball will be going. Others may not see you approaching with a shot. Make sure they are out of range..
= Similarly, it is not only unsafe to take practice swings in someone's direction, it is also considered rude.
= Make sure people are not walking around before you swing and stand still when others are swinging.

Pacing

= When you and your group may not be the only players on a course, try to keep your pace of play at a rate that keeps up with the group ahead of you to avoid holding up the ones behind.
= It is very, very rude to advance into the group playing ahead of you. If it was accidental, you would have failed to observed safety etiquette. If it was intentional and you did so because they are playing slowly, it is still no reason to drive a ball in their direction.
= When you need to play through a group, observe common courtesy by first asking permission to do so. But before asking, make sure that the next hole is vacant so that there is enough space between groups as you pass through.
= If the group allows you to play through, take the least amount of time to finish the hole and move on to the next one as quickly as possible.

When on the teeing ground

Trying to stay out of the player's line of sight as well as peripheral vision to allow him to concentrate. Standing behind him/her is the best way to do so, as well as keeping quiet as he/she prepares to swing.

When on the fairway

= hitting some divots is perfectly fine, but avoid causing too many. Furthermore, try to put a few back in by simply stepping on the divot into the hole.
= don't take too much time looking for a lost ball. The group behind you may not appreciate the delay. If it can't be found within a few minutes, simply replace the ball.

When on the bunker

= use the course-provided rake when you've finished with your shot to rake out marks left by you, your ball and your footprints, then leave the rake outside the bunker handle parallel to the fairway.

When on the green

= Avoid stepping on the ball paths of other players as this can affect the putt. Walk behind the ball on its direction to the hole or at least step over the imaginary line between the ball and the hole.

= Repair ball marks made by the force of the ball landing on the green. This shows courtesy to the player following you as you've taken the time to leave them an unmarked green.
 
= put your ball back on the green before picking up the ball marker just so you can avoid possible points of contention between another player as to whether you've properly positioned your ball or not.

When at the practice grounds
Continue to observe the general rules of golf etiquette as you would on the course.

Though these are not all of the good golfing etiquette practices, they are the basics you need to follow for each other's safety and love of the game. This will keep the experience all the more pleasant for all concerned. 

Basis Golf Etiquette


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