Welcome to golf-monthly.co.uk

Branding_print

Navigation


Focus on the positives


Are you haunted by visions of shocking shots in your golfing past?

If you can recall past memories of your most awful games, holes or shots, then you can almost certainly do the same for your good memories. It's my guess you probably spend more time recalling your bad experiences. Why? Because you will be trying really hard to understand where you went wrong so you can remedy the mistake.

Golf is largely taught as faults and fixes. Unhappily for most golfers this approach to their mind game reinforces a self-fulfilling prophecy. It ensures they are destined to repeat their mistakes. In fact the better they are at remembering these experiences, the better they will be at repeating these moments when they play.

Take shanking a shot as an example. Most amateurs I have coached can describe this shot with great clarity. They know exactly what it looks like, sounds like and feels like. Which is precisely why they are so very good at repeating it. This is why you need to blur these memories.

Some simple ways to scrub bad games, holes and shots from your memory are noted below. If you want to effortlessly improve you scores and handicap, here's the secret:

RELAX Find a quite place and comfortable chair, take a deep breath and get into a calm and relaxed mood.

GOOD SHOTS Relive the experience of a great shot. Stay with it for a few moments and really enjoy the experience. Repeat for other specific great shots one at a time. This will begin building muscle memories of shots you want to repeat to lower your handicap, not those you don't want.

BAD SHOTS Recall a specific picture of you hitting a bad shot in your mind's eye and, taking your time, try to diminish the vividness of this memory. After a longish break try to get the picture back, and you may notice that you can't? Do this for other bad shots. This process will lessen most players' natural tendency to recall vivid memories of bad shots and the propensity to replay them!

Following these steps will seriously improve your shot making simply by reinforcing your good memories and discarding your bad ones.

David Norman has more than a decade of professional golf psychology experience and has coached several of the world's most successful PGA tour professionals. 

Share this article

email this to a friend

  • Bookmark
  • Print
  • Comment

Click on a link below to share this article with your favourite link sharing site


Rate this Article

Rate this content

0 stars

0 Votes

Current Rating


Reader comments

Add your comments

No comments have been added yet. Be the first by adding yours below...

Add your comments

Please note that we review all comments before they will appear on our site.

Equipment Reviews

TaylorMade r7 Limited review

On test:

r7 Limited review

The TaylorMade r7 Limited offers players flight changes of up to...




Back to top

Golf Monthly magazine

February 2009 cover

What's in this issue?

Golf Monthly February 2009

Issue highlights

Find your nearest UK newsagent

Subscribe

Buy now and save up to 36%!

Subscribe

/




What do you think?

Take part in our latest poll...

Has the golfing world really missed Tiger Woods?

Poll

  • Yes (56%)
  • No (44%)

See all polls..



Sign up for the Golf Monthly newsletter

Sign up for the Golf Monthly newsletter

Get instruction tips, gear reviews and the latest golf news direct to your inbox

More information


Golf Monthly Competitions

Win one of 20 copies of The European Tour Yearbook 2009

Relive what was a truly momentous 12 months for the game of golf with the 21st edition of the European Tour Yearbook. We have 20 hot-off-the-press...

Enter competition



See all competitions