The Game of Life
Legacy signals
Legacy popularity: 1,784 legacy views
I have great admiration for professional golfers. They have a mighty career task. They plan their schedules a year in advance, hire their own caddies and make their own travel arrangements.
They play in a professional-amateur tou
ament the day before competition begins, which requires being gracious, sociable and also attempting to play well, so they don't embarrass themselves.
They usually start the tou
ament on Thursday and run the risk of being disqualified by missing ‘the cut’ on Friday, which leaves them out of the money, even though they still must pay for all the expenses of that week. Win or lose, they are on the road again Sunday evening or Monday morning and on to the next city, the next course.
They repeat this same series of steps week after week.
Their pay for each tou
ament is listed in the national papers for everyone to see, and there is no space allowed for explaining that their results were gained or lost due to high winds, freezing rain, or a myriad of other mishaps.
Why am I telling you all of this? Golf is a responsive, rather than reactive, sport. So is life, done well. Therefore, life and golf have a lot in common.
It takes the intelligence of good course management, coupled with sensitivity and awareness, to be a good golfer. You can have the most expensive club membership and golf cart, the deluxe clubs, and the top of the line golf clothes, and still be dreadful at the game.
You can have the perfect swing and no concentration. You look good but you lose. You can have a terrible looking swing, yet get the job done anyway. You can play by guts alone and do okay, but the wear and tear on your body eventually catches up with you.
You must pay attention to the task at hand in golf, and in life. Keep a clear mental focus. If you're too tense, you'll hit it short. Too relaxed, you'll lose control. Miscalculate the yardage or misread the wind, and you will choose the wrong club. Talk too much? Everyone will hate playing with you. Too serious, or too quiet? You are no fun.
The more you hang on to the mental picture of holes played poorly, the more doomed you are to repeat the exact same mistakes. This is true in life also. Practice does not make perfect, particularly if you practice an inaccurate move. Just about the time you think you are at the top of your game, the wheels fall off.
Sometimes you just can't do anything right and sometimes the gods are with you and you can't do anything wrong, until the next time you play. Golf, like life, is an exercise in learning how to deal with and respond to adversity. Focus on your fear and your fear takes over.
Being a long hitter looks impressive but it can cost you in control and accuracy. You can have a great long game, but you still need to be able to settle down and putt.
There is such a thing as golf course etiquette. Violate the rules and people will talk about you behind your back.
The game looks like a walk in the park, but tell that to the players. Sometimes you play extraordinarily well, but your score doesn't show it. If you lose your temper and show it, you pay a fine. If you are a professional, you have to continue playing, even if the weather turns bad.
Think too much and you second-guess yourself. Think too little and you make costly mistakes. If the course is too easy, you can get sloppy. Too hard? You find yourself in over your head.
Eventually, you find yourself ‘on the back nine.’ Your options of playing it ‘cute’ diminish the farther down the course you get. Sometimes, you can make up for mistakes and disasters that tripped you up on the front nine, make a turnaround, and finish as a winner, or at least, with a respectable effort to your credit.
So why do so many people play golf and so many more take it up each year?
Maybe it's because it is perfectly acceptable to voice your anger and disappointment over a less than thrilling golf performance, but if you complain about your life, people aren't nearly as interested, supportive or forgiving.
Article author
About the Author
Susan McNeal Velasquez writes and produces seminars on how to Unleash The Power of Your Intuition. Want self-help? Her book: Beyond Intellect: Journey Into the Wisdom of Your Intuitive Mind is available on Amazon.com. www.susanvelasquez.com. & www.beyondintellect.com
Further reading
Further Reading
Article
Get Inspired with 10 Powerful Byron Katie Quotes
Byron Katie developed the powerful method of inquiry known as The Work, which helps people see their problems from an entirely different perspective, based on her direct experience of how suffering is created and ended. Since 1986, she has introduced The Work to hundreds of thousands of people in over 30 countries arou
Related piece
Website
The Official Blog for The Work of Byron Katie
Events and messages from the desk of Byron Katie, originator of The Work, a simple method to question your mind and find acceptance, peace, and freedom.
Related piece
Article
Spiritual Empowerment
Those of us on the spiritual path have by and large undergone profound shifts in the past decade or two. We have sought “enlightenment,” more peace, positive energy, and healing. One of the most significant shifts, I feel, is that towards what I would call “Spiritual Empowerment.” If ... Those of us on the spiritual path have by and large undergone profound shifts in the past decade or two. We have sought “enlightenment,” more peace, positive energy, and healing. One of the most significant shifts, I feel, is that towards what I would call “Spiritual Empowerment.”rnr
Related piece
Article
How To Use Nature In Guided Imagery & Guided Meditation
We’re so inundated with overstimulating input from modern life that simply stopping for a while and experiencing what nature has to offer tends to invoke deep relaxation, and a healing response in the body. It’s as if part of us has been on hold, just waiting for the opportunity to open up and relax. Nature can be the doorway.
Related piece