
Most golfers would jump at tactics that draw on more brainpower for a better shot at the green. It’s not all new, though. For instance, you find traces of it in the tribal wisdom of the Dakota Indians that passed from one generation to the next.
I’m not sure if the tribe golfed or not … but when they suggested that … ![]()
Whenever you are riding a dead horse, the best strategy is to dismount and try another route
… they spoke to every golfer I know. It takes change and another route to improve a golf game and change is as hard for golfers as it likely was for the
Rather than shift “routes” in golf we buy better clubs, change courses, threaten to quit the game, and ask others how they ride their dead horses. We even classify dead as living impaired, to avoid its finality … and hire others to teach us new ways to think about “dead.” Anything but change….
We offer funding for dead coaching programs, gather data on other dead horses, or rewrite the rules for all dead horses. How does it work?
Luckily … revolutionary news about the human brains helps golfers to bury dead horses so we can move quicker to the green. One change I'm planing is to golf earlier in the day before the











All I know is that new titanium driver you bought on Saturday brought new life to your golf!! --like a rising sun and not a dead horse.
Posted by: Robyn McMaster | August 8, 2006 5:26 AM | Permalink to Comment