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My Golf Routine…Or Lack Thereof

October 15, 2012 | By Chris Chirico | Leave a Comment

Despite what people may think, I do have a routine when it comes to golf.  As a matter of fact, I’ll share it with you just to prove it – I oversleep, waste too much time and then show up to the course with barely a moment to spare. 

OK, so that’s not much of a routine.  Plus, I’m exaggerating also, but this does happen quite often, just ask the rest of the stinky golfers.  It’s very rare that I give myself enough time to do anything other than get to the course.  Is that a problem?  Do I need to develop some type of routine?  Is that what golfers do?  

I have a regular workday routine.  I have a specific order in which I do things every morning, or even the night before for that matter.  But when it comes to golf, I got nothin’.  Many times, as mentioned earlier, I show up last minute.  But there has been occasions, though few and far between, where I have done otherwise.  Sometimes I’ve shown up early enough to have breakfast at the course rather than scarfing something down on the way out the door or in the car.  There’s been times where I’ve arrived at the course early enough to hit a few balls at the range or play around on the putting green.  Every once in a while, I may have a beer or two before a round. 

What I wonder is, would doing any of these things routinely make me a better player just through some type of consistency?  If I wasn’t always rushing to get to the course, would that help simply by causing less stress?  If I took the time to sit down and eat a good breakfast before each round, would that improve my energy?  If I had a beer or two each time, would that help me relax? 

I suppose having a routine in anything you do can be helpful.  But I’ve just never really considered doing something routinely for golf.  But maybe a routine might be worth looking into.  Maybe I should start hitting the range before each round.  Maybe a good breakfast each time.  Or…maybe I’ll just keep showing up last minute.

Swing ’til you’re happy!        

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: golf course, golf routine, golf stinks, golfstinks

There’s More To The Game Of Golf Than Golf Itself

October 8, 2012 | By Chris Chirico | 2 Comments

Most of the golfers I know have been playing since they were little kids.  Many of them took up the game because a parent played.  But not me.  I didn’t take up golf when I was young mainly because my father didn’t play.  He had an older set of clubs because he thought he would give the game a chance.  But he wasn’t particulary fond of it, so he gave it up before I was ever around.

Nevertheless, even though my father didn’t pass the game down to me, I can see how the game can be a great bonding tool for a father and son.  And so I’ve used the game as a bonding tool for my boys and I.

See, one of the best things about this great game is the camraderie and banter that goes on between any group out on the course.  Be it ball-busting with your regular golf buddies, or serious conversation between friends or family, the golf course seems to provide an almost private setting where opinions and thoughts can be shared.  It’s almost as if the golf course somehow gives you the ability to say things that you just may not say in another place or at another time.

But it’s today in particular that makes me think of how things would have been had my father and I ever had the chance to play golf together.  I lost my father just over fourteen years ago at an all too early age, and today would have been his 67th birthday.  It’s today especially that I wonder, when my buddies talked me into giving this great game a chance, would I have been able to convince my father to give it another shot?  And if I did, would there ever have been the ball-busting that my buddies and I regularly give to each other?  Probably.  Would good, serious conversation have happened as well?  Most likely.  If I got to spend those few more hours a week, just my dad and I, would my life possibly have taken a different path?  Who kows?  But one thing’s for sure, my father would have used it as a time to, in one way or another, pass along a life lesson here and there.

So I try to do the same.  Maybe there are a few things that me and my boys may want to say to each other that can’t be said in front of their mother.  Maybe there are things that we don’t want a stranger to hear.  Maybe there are thoughts that just can’t be shared anywhere else other than out on the course, where secrets stay.  And then there are the lessons the game of golf teaches in itself.  Lessons about competitiveness, patience, courtesy and sportsmanship among others.

I’ve said many times before that there is much more to a round of golf than just the game itself.  If you’re out on the course for nothing other than the game, then you have no idea what you’re actually missing.  Golf is more than a game.  Golf is a tool.  It’s a tool that can be used to build and maintain relationships.  It’s a tool for helping one learn how to deal with things in their everyday lives.  It’s a tool that can be used to pass along ideas and lessons to younger generations.

Don’t get me wrong, my father and I had a fantastic relationship.  We had other ways of bonding.  He was my best friend.  But after taking up the game myself and attempting to teach it to my kids, I now have a better understanding of that “more to a game of golf” thing.  When I have the opportunity to play the game and spend the time with people that I truly care about, my friends and family, I have a deeper understanding of the game.  It’s that deeper understanding that makes me wonder if my father may have hung up his clubs too soon.  Or, perhaps I may have picked them up too late.

Swing ’til you’re happy!

Filed Under: Golf Life Tagged With: golf buddies, lessons learned from golf

Going To Work vs. Playing Golf

October 1, 2012 | By Chris Chirico | 1 Comment

So I have this dilemma and I’m not sure what to do.  It sounds simple enough – play golf vs. go to work.  But it’s never really that simple is it?

See, at work we’re experiencing a “busy time” like nothing we have ever seen.  While that’s great for the company as a whole, as well as for me and my paycheck, at the same time it’s terrible for playing hooky. 

If I’m not at work during this busy time, then I have to rely on other people to handle things in my absence.  And too many times that leads to things simply not being done right, or being done half-assed.  But at the same time, why should I care about that?  If things fall apart that much when I’m not there, then they’re obviously not paying me enough.  But I do care, and that’s part of the problem. 

So what I’ll have to do is weigh the options.  What are the advantages of going to work vs. taking the day off to play golf.  Let’s see:

If I go to work I don’t have to worry about anything being done wrong.  I don’t have to worry about cleaning up anyone else’s mess.  I don’t have to worry about the work being done half-assed.  And most importantly, I won’t have to fix all of these things while still having my own job to do. 

Now, if I play golf, I get to enjoy a day out on the links which I would normally spend at work where I’ve been under a good amount of stress lately.  Of course, I no doubt will return to work to find a disaster making me question whether or not taking the time off was worth it.  Further, I could avoid all of this by simply golfing on the weekend instead of during the week.

Well, I think with these points in mind it’s pretty self-explanatory.  It just doesn’t make sense for me to take a day off from work to play golf.  And with that being said, I will be sure to set my out-of-office reply. 

See, golf always out-weighs work.  I have time off to use, I should use it to do something I enjoy, and that would be golf.  So is it worth a potential hard day at the office in exchange for a day of golf when I would normally be at work?  Silly question.

Swing ’til you’re happy!               

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: golf course, golf stinks, golf vs. work, golfstinks, playing hooky

Chip Shots: The Long Drive Hole

September 27, 2012 | By Chris Chirico | Leave a Comment

I’ve played in a few golf tournaments in my time.  And I’ve noticed that in every tournament there is one hole that sets you up to fail.  There’s one hole that plays with your mind.  There’s one hole that grabs at your emotions and forces you to do something that you really want to do, but know you shouldn’t.  What is it you ask?  It’s the long-drive hole of course! 

What hole simultaneously forces you to decide between exactly what you do and don’t want to do, when deep inside you know you should just focus on your game.  This hole of course.

You stare down the fairway and you see it.  The sign posted right where the longest drive of the day landed.  You say to yourself “If I get hold of one I could beat that.”  But the little voice inside your head is telling you not to do it.  You’re playing a good game, don’t risk blowing it now.  You know damn well there’s just as good a chance, if not better, that you’re going to launch your ball into a neighboring fairway.  But you don’t listen to that little voice.  No.  Instead, you pull the cover off your driver, line up over the ball, rear back and with the force only Sir Isaac Newton could truly appreciate, you hammer that drive with all your might.  And you and your buddies watch as…

Well, you know what you did.            

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: chip shots, golf stinks, golf tournament, golfstinks, Isaac Newton

Want To Stroke Your Golf Ego? Become An Astronaut

September 24, 2012 | By Chris Chirico | Leave a Comment

Let’s face it, nothing quite strokes the old ego of a golfer more than a long drive.  Even further, a long drive that draws ooh’s and aah’s from the people in your group and maybe the groups around you.  I can’t tell you how many times I hear phrases such as “Back when I used to play more often, I could drive 320, 325 easy.”  Yeah, sure you could.  And I put the ball within a foot of the cup every time I hit out of a green side bunker. 

No one ever says that they were a great putter.  No one ever tells me about their amazing chipping ability.  It’s always the long drive, like there’s no other part of a golf game.  It’s this exact reason that the idea of Alan Shepard hitting a golf ball on the moon makes me laugh.  Really, what would posses an astronaut, who is one of a very select group of people to ever have the opportunity to walk on the moon, to sneak the head of 6-iron in his space suit in order to modify another piece of equipment to create a golf club?!  I’ll tell you what…his ego needed stroking.

Answer this question.  Where on earth could you, or anyone for that matter, hit a 6-iron over 400 yards.  The answer is nowhere.  Alan Shepard knew that, and he also knew where it could be done.  A place where very few would ever have the opportunity to hit a golf ball – the moon.  So in need of an ego-stroking, Alan Shepard sneaks a modified six-iron and a couple of golf balls on his trip to the moon.  And the results?  See it here:

 
As if Mr. Shepard isn’t rubbing it in our faces enough that he gets to play golf while he’s working, he has to throw that little comment in at the end.  Three little words…”Miles and miles.”  How do we know for sure?  He chunked his first shot, and we can only see about seven or eight feet in front of him.  For all we know, that ball went about ten feet and duck-hooked into a mound of lunar dirt.  Either that, or it hit the wall of the airplane hangar in which they were staging the landing to begin with.  But that’s another story.

Not only that, but being that the ball is off camera and due to the previously mentioned three little words, we as viewers are left with the image of a ball traveling an infinite distance into the dark nothingness that is space.  But in reality, the ball supposedly landed about 430 yards away.  See, on the moon, a golf ball may only weigh about a quarter of an ounce, but it still weighs something.  So it’s going to land eventually.  The “miles and miles” comment?  Just a little fluff for the camera.

So if you really need to give your golf ego a boost, you may want to see what you can do about getting yourself into space camp.  Otherwise, unless you can easily hit a ball 500-plus with your driver, you’ll never even approach 400 with your six.  And no, I won’t believe you if you told me you could when you played more often.

Swing ’til you’re happy!         

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Alan Shepard, astronaut, faked moon landing, golf balls on the moon, golf on the moon, long drive, moon landing, space camp, walking on the moon

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