 One of the biggest variables
that effect your development as a player can
be the way you evaluate your practice and
play. Remembering this tip to react as a
scientist rather than a judge can go a long
way toward helping speed your learning
curve.
A scientist looks at every experiment as an
opportunity to gather information and learn
from the information gathered. What
variables might be manipulated to get a
different result in the next experiment?
With that purposeful manipulation, what is
the new outcome? To a scientist, there is
no “good” or “bad” result. All results
simply are as they are, and these results
become the feedback mechanism from which
something different is tried or previous
variables are replicated.
Contrast this with the way a judge would view
these “experiments”. Results are good or
bad, right or wrong, horrible or terrific, so-
so or “OK”. There is a lot of emphasis on
labeling the result, and less emphasis on the
process that created the result. Are you
a scientist or a judge when it comes to
evaluating your own golf performance?
The best golfers in the world understand how
important it is to examine defeat, recognize
mistakes, and pull apart miscues. They do
this in a way that is methodical and
constructively critical. Golfers who think
less healthily will simply be critical and
this criticism can lead to little or no
learning and growing. All this process does
is diminish confidence, tear apart your self-
image, and inhibit your ability to change and
effectively integrate lessons into your
game.
When Thomas Edison was asked by a reporter
how it felt to fail over 1,000 times before
figuring out how to invent the light bulb,
Edison was reported to have responded, “Sir,
I never failed, I now know over 1,000 ways
how not to create a light bulb.” Edison the
scientist, as a golfer, might have responded
to having played poorly in a tournament or
hit some poor golf shots in a similar
fashion. “OK, I now know that going for this
par-5 in two is unrealistic for me. Next
time I’ll lay up and play to the safer side
of the fairway”.
See if you can evolve to the point where you
think, “OK, I now know that swing thought,
that strategy, that tactic, that game plan,
doesn’t work well. What adjustments will I
make the next time I’m faced with this
situation?” Typically, this evaluation
begins with the two words, “next time”.
Rather than what you should have or could
have done, thinking about the changes that
you will institute “next time” can be much
more beneficial. This “scientific” approach
will help you evaluate your game in an
effective, positive, and constructive manner,
and perhaps most importantly help you enjoy
your game even more!
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