Life
is full of ups and downs. Just by living your daily life, you
experience moments of joy, concern, loss, sorrow, disbelief,
tragedy, triumph, and pleasure. A well-rounded person is able to
deal with these emotions without experiencing extreme periods of
euphoria and depression when the next moment brings a disaster. Golf
will prepare you and teach you to do this better than any other
activity.
The
first thing that golf presents you with is a challenge. As easy as
it looks, you will find out quickly that the simple act of striking
a golf ball with the head of a golf club is not that simple. You
must learn to keep your body and your mind focused while moving in
unity at great speed. Then you are faced with the challenge of
hitting the ball where you want it to go. You find that delivering
the club head to the ball at even slight angles can produce
disastrous effects. You have to do things right for the ball to go
straight. You find that applying massive amounts of undisciplined
force produces much worse results than no force at all.
Then,
as you begin to play, you find that hitting the huge fairways and
greens is deceptively hard. Your frustration mounts as the things
that looked so easy seem to be out of grasp. Sometimes you feel like
quitting, but for some reason you shoulder on, unsure of what the
outcome will be. As you play with people and they ask you your score
after each hole, you are tempted to not count a shot that seemed
somehow unfair. The look from your playing partner when you say,
“6”, quickly causes you to say, “Oh. I mean 7”. You remember the
shame the entire week.
As
you become better, you begin to experience moments of triumph as the
shots that you attempt start to find their mark. Then, just when you
were doing so well, disaster strikes and you can’t seem to hit the
broadside of a barn. Your smile turns into a rage and the more you
rage, the worse things get. You calm down to a frown and things go a
little bit better.
You
get better, you get your first birdie, and you jump up and down for
joy. Your next shot off the tee goes into the woods or out of
bounds, but you are hooked and your disappointment doesn’t last as
long because by now, you’ve learned that the only thing you can do
is try again.
You
stop wasting your time on things like going to bars after work or
rushing home to plop in front of the TV or play video games. You are
so hooked that you spend hours playing alone into the twilight
trying to finish those last two holes in the dark. You keep your
score and the first time you don’t do it honestly, you realize that
the only person suffering from your cheating is you. You don’t find
any pleasure in telling people you shot a 44 for 9 holes when you
shot a 48. You feel somehow noble when you say the words,
“Forty-eight”.
You learn that every time you play, a challenge
is given to you and you look out onto the course with a
competiveness in your sole that you have never experienced. You grin
at the thought of having to par 18 to break 80. You hope that you
get the chance. You want to be the first one off the tee, but you
offer the opportunity to your playing partners.
For
some reason you continue to play for a few years. Then one day you
do something, or someone else does something, that makes you realize
that you are not a liar, cheat, thief, or rude and you are generally
calmer in moments of crisis. Integrity is a welcome way of life for
you. You find yourself eager to tackle hard tasks and you take
pleasure in doing things right whether anyone else is around or not.
You want to do it the best. You know that the harder the challenge
is, the better you are going to feel when you meet it. Things that
used to seem hard now seem easy, and you don’t struggle as much
while you do them.
Best
of all, no matter how bad or hard things get, you don’t
quit.
Copyright
2008 Web Smith
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