Skip to main content

Now I know how Tiger Woods feels

A couple of years ago Tiger made some changes to his golf swing, under the guidance of a new coach (Sean Foley), and while he is still considered a good golfer, he isn't the great golfer he was before making those changes. Some might attribute most of his problems to the break up with his wife, because that's when everything started to go a different direction, but I know better.

There was a time when I was a better than average bowler. I was able to average between 195 and 200 pretty consistently in all the leagues I was in, but like Tiger I wasn't satisfied.  I thought I could be better.

So I took a lesson.

The lesson was well worth while [or so I thought]. My "coach" helped me correct a number of problems I was having, and as the lesson progressed, I was feeling really good about my game.

Of course that was practice, and one thing I've learned from 30+ years in manufacturing, is nothing ever works in the lab, under controlled conditions, like it does when it gets into production. There are so many more variables that enter into the equation.

And there in lies the problem. Ever since taking that lesson, and changed my delivery/approach, like Tiger, I'm not the same bowler. I'm more consistent with my delivery (at least I think I am), but I find myself continually reverting back to bad habits, which combined with the new techniques, produces too many unwanted outcomes. The frustrating part is I know when I'm screwing up. I just can't stop it, and my game has suffered.

So what does a person do when faced with such a dilemma? Do you go back to doing what you used to do, what you've been accustomed to doing?  Do you fire your coach?

Tiger hasn't done any of that [yet]. He keeps persisting. I'm sure, he thinks, in the long run, it's what's best, and I happen to agree with him.

If you aren't striving for perfection, or at least trying to improve yourself, what's the point? All top athletes have a coach. Sometimes more than one. Whether it be football, golf, swimming, cycling, track and field, or whatever, the best athletes in the world, are the best because they are constantly trying to improve themselves. Those that don't are relegated to being mediocre (in cycling they're called 'Domestics').

The same goes for life. Resting on our laurels, never making changes, never encountering new experiences doesn't make us better. It just keeps us mediocre. Over a year ago I posted about bowling being a metaphor on life, but it's not just about bowling. Sports are a metaphor for life, and we'd all be better off taking a lesson from the best.

So in keeping with Tiger's philosophy I'm doing just that. Instead of giving up (which I'm sad to say, I have considered), I've signed up for a 4 day bowling camp in Vegas next month, put on by my current instructor, along with the help of a number of other professional bowlers.

Like Tiger I'm convinced it's the right decision.

Comments

Ed Dignan said…
Great advice. Have fun in Vegas

Popular posts from this blog

Vaccine Mandates, what are they good for?

Not much, that's for sure! Simply showing evidence of receiving a Covid-19 vaccine (whether fake or not), does not mean you are protected from getting Covid-19, nor spreading it, if infected. We are all different, and too many of us, i.e. people who are immunocompromised/ immunosupressed, the elderly, or others for various reasons, do not [cannot] mount an immune response as good as younger and healthier individuals. What is evidence of immunity is a quantitative antibody test showing you have developed antibodies, and to what degree, either from natural immunity or the vaccine.  That is what we should be testing for. That is what is important. But for too long, many, i.e. the FDA, doctors, and other health experts discouraged people (and still are) from getting antibody tests, because there was little knowledge about what level of antibodies are needed to impart immunity to the virus. That of course is true, to some extent, but how can we ever find out [learn] the answer to that q

History IS repeating itself

I didn't grow up during the rise and fall of Hitler and Nazi Germany, so for me to claim it feels like those are the times we are living in now, must be taken with a grain of salt. But I have seen enough movies, and read enough history to know, if the times we're living in now are not akin to the rise of a Nazism and Facism in Europe in the 1930's and 1940's, then we're not far off. If you can't see the parallels with Nazi Germany, then you must be living in a different country than me. Republicans and other right wing extremists will stop at nothing to subvert the will of the majority, forcing their beliefs, that they are the superior race and have been appointed by God, to impose their will on America, while they blame all our problems on immigrants, blacks and Jews. As I speak, Mitch McConnell, and his minions are raising roadblocks to all legislation designed to help average Americans under the guise of fiscal responsibility. They condone violent and verba

Open letter to all Democrats

Stop the nonsense! Continuing to go after Trump, without any hope of getting a conviction, does nothing more than provide Republicans with an obstructionist dialogue (now that they have come up with the unconstitutional talking point) in addition to giving Trump much needed publicity, when we should be ignoring him. It's the pure definition of insanity, doing the same thing over and over again, and expecting a different result! Instead Democrats need to be laser focused on what is important to all Americans, i.e. healthcare, Social Security and Medicare, infrastructure reform, the Covid-19 vaccine rollout, to name just a few. And when you do talk about Trump, simply steer the conversation as to how the Trump administration botched everything, how Trump is responsible for the deaths of 400,000+ Americans, due to his inaction and the down playing of the pandemic, plus the deaths of 2 Capitol policeman during the insurrection Trump provoked and incited on January 6, 2021.