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    Alternative Approaches to Pain Relief
    Pain. The great leveler. The rich feel it. So do the poor, the happy, the sad, tall, and short. And, of course, article writers, too. It’s therefore not surprising to note that since the dawn of time, humans have attempted to discover ways to reduce pain. In some respect, our ability to experience pain, and seek ways to solve it, connects us more than anything else. But what exactly is pain and how do we deal with it?Pain is a message sent by the body to the brain, signaling the presence of disease, injury or strain. Without pain, you would be unaware of many problems - from torn ligaments to appendicitis. Pain is simply, Mother Nature's way of telling you something is wrong.Many of us kill the messenger with narcotics, anti-depressants and tranquilizers that take care of the symptoms, but not the cause of the pain. This kind of treatment cannot only mask symptoms of serious disease, but can also create a cycle of chronic pain.Not all pain though, serves a useful function. While acute pain, as described above can alert us to a serious problem, chronic pain can linger long after an ailment or injury has healed in the body. Examples of chronic pain include backache, migraines and
    d target. You'll miss the fairway most of the time. Narrow the target to a tree trunk and you'll still miss the tree trunk most of the time, but you'll easily be in the chosen side of the fairway.

    As you stand on the tee I ask you about your plan and your target. The plan is important; the target is a key component of the plan. It makes the plan possible. The whole concept of target is very important in golf, just as it is in other sports.

    As you stand on the tee and decide on a plan for playing the hole under today's conditions, you need to select a target that makes sense. This target cannot be a broad, vague area. It must be a very specific, narrow target. If your target is a distant tree, hit to the trunk rather than the whole bushy tree. The smaller your target, the more likely you are to hit it.

    Aim small, miss small.

    I was working with a student and asked him to hit a set of stairs that led to another practice tee with a 30-yard wedge shot. The stairs were three-feet wide and five-steps high. He kept trying to hit the whole set of stairs and missed every time. Then I asked him to pick out one step, and then pick out the right or left side of that step. You could see the enormous disbelief on his face when I made him get that specific. Within a few shots he had hit that step. The smaller the target, the more likely you will hit it. Aim small, miss small.

    As you assume your address position, address the target rather than the ball. Get into your address position, looking more often at the target than the ball. Most golfers address the ball, look at the ball and take a qu

    Who Designed That?
    Is your business to business company aligned with your customers, or only with your product development team? Ask the people in your company in sales, service, and support to tell you what really bothers them the most about the way new products are launched at your company. Are your sales people frequently being asked to sell products which don’t yet exist? How about selling products that you absolutely have to offer in order to compete, but there’s no clear positioning message to help sales articulate why someone should buy it from your company?Does your hotline support group complain that the same general problems show up over and over again with new products? Can they successfully answer the customers’ calls during the first couple of months after a new product is launched? Do your implementation services technicians spend a lot of time gathering requirements for customized versions of your product, tailored to meet their customer’s unique needs? Did your operations or IT organization create a special task force that meets every Tuesday to analyze and determine how to support any new product announcements that have happened in the last week?If the answer to any of these questions w
    This instruction will improve your scoring, guaranteed. Understand and apply the Target Principle and your will be a better golfer forever – period. This is one of the few secrets of golf.

    Last week we discussed making a plan for each hole and every shot. Now we add a more finite piece to the puzzle, your target. Every shot requires a specific, small target.

    Target, Target, Target

    In real estate there are three things that are important: location, location, location. Golf also has three things that are important: target, target, target. It's not the swing and all the other processes that are all important; it's simply the target. Many, if not most, golfers see the ball as their target. Do away with that notion. It’s important to all golfers to know the truth -- the truth that the ball is only the object that is to be delivered to the target. Your target is the spot where you want the ball to end up or to land in order to end up on a predetermined spot.

    Higher handicap golfers have the ball

    as the target and the swing as the focus

    If your target is the ball you will develop a swing that will do little more than hit at the ball and create short, miss-hit and crooked shots. Higher handicap golfers have the ball as the target and the swing as the focus, with some vague, general idea of where they want the ball to go. With the ball as the target you build a wall just beyond the ball, a wall that hides the real target. Your system functions based on the goal you feed it. Your swing will be one that hits AT the ball, with no follow-through because your swing has achieved its goal: hitting the ball.

    You will have a swing that will deliver the ball to the target if your target is a place in the distance where you want the ball to end up. If fear of missing the ball dominates your thinking, your only objective is to hit the ball (or in reality, to not miss the ball). That becomes your total focus. We are goal-oriented beings. You will always have a goal, so it is important that you have one that really benefits you. Once we agree that the ball is not the target, the target becomes one of the most important aspects of the game of golf.

    The best golfers always have a very specific distant target in mind for every shot, during every swing. If your target is where you want the ball to go, you will develop a swing that will deliver the object (the ball) to the target rather than simply delivering the club head to the ball.

    I was talking with PGA Senior Tour Player Bruce Fleisher in the fall of 1999. During our conversation, I mentioned the importance of the target and he commented that since he started playing golf as a child all he really tried to do was hit the ball to the target. "Target, target, target, that's all I saw was the target," Bruce told me.

    Bruce was saying that good golfers actually "see" the target while they are swinging. Golf doesn't allow you to look at the target while swinging, so you need to memorize exactly where the target is and keep that picture in your mind's eye while swinging. It's a golfer’s way of looking at the catcher’s glove, the basketball hoop, or the horseshoe pole. Our "system" makes the body function correctly to accomplish the desired goal. So choose your goal well.

    The athlete always has an awareness of the ball and its exact location. To the observer it may appear that the golf professional is looking at the ball part of the time. That is not actually true. We “look” with our eyes, but we “see” with our minds. That’s why the caption of the picture on the previous page is “Looking at the ball (so it seems) but seeing the target.”

    If you keep the picture of the goal (the target) in mind, your system will respond to that picture and will make every attempt to deliver the ball to your target. Your system will micromanage your body to create the motion necessary to get the job done. Isn't it nice that you no longer have to do the micromanaging? That's the way your system is set up, and you should let it work to your advantage. With no distant target, your system gets lost and the ball becomes the target. Your swing breaks down and your shot is not what you want.

    It is important to comment on the “Nicklaus” aiming technique. This technique is to pick out a small, noticeable bit of something on the ground twelve inches in front of the ball, in line with the distant target. The idea is to “square up” the club face to the bit of something and thus have the club face correctly aimed at the distant target.

    I’ve seen golfers employ this technique, many times to their disadvantage. They have become so enamored with “aiming” at the twelve-inch spot that the spot has become their target. Once they have determined their distant target, they spend the remaining pre-swing time aiming the club at the spot on the ground. They never look at the distant target again! The real target no longer exists to them. This is almost the same as having the ball as their target. They have built the “wall,” not at the ball, but twelve inches in front of the ball.

    The distant target must be the clear picture and the focus of your mind. You can certainly use the “Nicklaus” technique for aiming the club, but be careful that the spot on the ground does not become your target.

    Young people don't need swing instruction. They just need a club, some balls and a pine cone or some other small target to hit the ball to. They will develop the correct swing with no instruction. As if we needed another good reason to never grow up.... Seeing the target is an important point and it needs to be stated another way. Blind people play golf. Imagine yourself as a blind golfer hitting a shot to a green. Your caddie has helped you address the ball. Now he describes your target in detail: the distance, the size of the green, the undulations of the ground, the position of the pin, uphill or downhill, the location of the bunkers and water, etc. As a blind golfer, what will you focus on as you make your swing? It will certainly be the target area, not the ball. Should the process be any different because you can see?

    If you go away with only

    one thing from this book,

    make it the target concept.

    Let's take the target concept from the general to the specific so that you can incorporate it into your game. Standing on the tee trying to hit a 50 yard-wide fairway is really tough because it's too wide; there is no defined target. You'll miss the fairway most of the time. Narrow the target to a tree trunk and you'll still miss the tree trunk most of the time, but you'll easily be in the chosen side of the fairway.

    As you stand on the tee I ask you about your plan and your target. The plan is important; the target is a key component of the plan. It makes the plan possible. The whole concept of target is very important in golf, just as it is in other sports.

    As you stand on the tee and decide on a plan for playing the hole under today's conditions, you need to select a target that makes sense. This target cannot be a broad, vague area. It must be a very specific, narrow target. If your target is a distant tree, hit to the trunk rather than the whole bushy tree. The smaller your target, the more likely you are to hit it.

    Aim small, miss small.

    I was working with a student and asked him to hit a set of stairs that led to another practice tee with a 30-yard wedge shot. The stairs were three-feet wide and five-steps high. He kept trying to hit the whole set of stairs and missed every time. Then I asked him to pick out one step, and then pick out the right or left side of that step. You could see the enormous disbelief on his face when I made him get that specific. Within a few shots he had hit that step. The smaller the target, the more likely you will hit it. Aim small, miss small.

    As you assume your address position, address the target rather than the ball. Get into your address position, looking more often at the target than the ball. Most golfers address the ball, look at the ball and take a qu

    Rolfing—The Benefits
    Dr. Ida P. Rolf believes, “You cannot change your behavior without changing your body.” Dr. Rolf’s vision is that by aligning the body with Earth’s gravity field, can take charge of our own human evolution and step into a higher order of being Human.Developed over 50 years ago by Dr. Ida Rolf, Ph.D., Rolfing® structural integration works on the web-like complex of connective tissue (fascia) to release, realign and balance the whole body.It can resolve pain and discomfort from many different causes, including those related to the lingering effects of trauma, back pain, repetitive motion injury and aging. Rolfing is also an excellent foundation for and complement to yoga, pilates and other personal wellness practices.This vision gives Rolfing® Structural Integration its distinction as a transformational approach to the body. Rolfing goes beyond the popular approach of ‘fixing.’ Any pains, problems and structural issues are addressed through the Rolfing focus on integrating the parts in relation to the whole.Unique to Rolfing® is the focus on the body in relation to gravity—the most fundamental and constant force with which humans deal. Humans function most efficiently and ef
    oal: hitting the ball.

    You will have a swing that will deliver the ball to the target if your target is a place in the distance where you want the ball to end up. If fear of missing the ball dominates your thinking, your only objective is to hit the ball (or in reality, to not miss the ball). That becomes your total focus. We are goal-oriented beings. You will always have a goal, so it is important that you have one that really benefits you. Once we agree that the ball is not the target, the target becomes one of the most important aspects of the game of golf.

    The best golfers always have a very specific distant target in mind for every shot, during every swing. If your target is where you want the ball to go, you will develop a swing that will deliver the object (the ball) to the target rather than simply delivering the club head to the ball.

    I was talking with PGA Senior Tour Player Bruce Fleisher in the fall of 1999. During our conversation, I mentioned the importance of the target and he commented that since he started playing golf as a child all he really tried to do was hit the ball to the target. "Target, target, target, that's all I saw was the target," Bruce told me.

    Bruce was saying that good golfers actually "see" the target while they are swinging. Golf doesn't allow you to look at the target while swinging, so you need to memorize exactly where the target is and keep that picture in your mind's eye while swinging. It's a golfer’s way of looking at the catcher’s glove, the basketball hoop, or the horseshoe pole. Our "system" makes the body function correctly to accomplish the desired goal. So choose your goal well.

    The athlete always has an awareness of the ball and its exact location. To the observer it may appear that the golf professional is looking at the ball part of the time. That is not actually true. We “look” with our eyes, but we “see” with our minds. That’s why the caption of the picture on the previous page is “Looking at the ball (so it seems) but seeing the target.”

    If you keep the picture of the goal (the target) in mind, your system will respond to that picture and will make every attempt to deliver the ball to your target. Your system will micromanage your body to create the motion necessary to get the job done. Isn't it nice that you no longer have to do the micromanaging? That's the way your system is set up, and you should let it work to your advantage. With no distant target, your system gets lost and the ball becomes the target. Your swing breaks down and your shot is not what you want.

    It is important to comment on the “Nicklaus” aiming technique. This technique is to pick out a small, noticeable bit of something on the ground twelve inches in front of the ball, in line with the distant target. The idea is to “square up” the club face to the bit of something and thus have the club face correctly aimed at the distant target.

    I’ve seen golfers employ this technique, many times to their disadvantage. They have become so enamored with “aiming” at the twelve-inch spot that the spot has become their target. Once they have determined their distant target, they spend the remaining pre-swing time aiming the club at the spot on the ground. They never look at the distant target again! The real target no longer exists to them. This is almost the same as having the ball as their target. They have built the “wall,” not at the ball, but twelve inches in front of the ball.

    The distant target must be the clear picture and the focus of your mind. You can certainly use the “Nicklaus” technique for aiming the club, but be careful that the spot on the ground does not become your target.

    Young people don't need swing instruction. They just need a club, some balls and a pine cone or some other small target to hit the ball to. They will develop the correct swing with no instruction. As if we needed another good reason to never grow up.... Seeing the target is an important point and it needs to be stated another way. Blind people play golf. Imagine yourself as a blind golfer hitting a shot to a green. Your caddie has helped you address the ball. Now he describes your target in detail: the distance, the size of the green, the undulations of the ground, the position of the pin, uphill or downhill, the location of the bunkers and water, etc. As a blind golfer, what will you focus on as you make your swing? It will certainly be the target area, not the ball. Should the process be any different because you can see?

    If you go away with only

    one thing from this book,

    make it the target concept.

    Let's take the target concept from the general to the specific so that you can incorporate it into your game. Standing on the tee trying to hit a 50 yard-wide fairway is really tough because it's too wide; there is no defined target. You'll miss the fairway most of the time. Narrow the target to a tree trunk and you'll still miss the tree trunk most of the time, but you'll easily be in the chosen side of the fairway.

    As you stand on the tee I ask you about your plan and your target. The plan is important; the target is a key component of the plan. It makes the plan possible. The whole concept of target is very important in golf, just as it is in other sports.

    As you stand on the tee and decide on a plan for playing the hole under today's conditions, you need to select a target that makes sense. This target cannot be a broad, vague area. It must be a very specific, narrow target. If your target is a distant tree, hit to the trunk rather than the whole bushy tree. The smaller your target, the more likely you are to hit it.

    Aim small, miss small.

    I was working with a student and asked him to hit a set of stairs that led to another practice tee with a 30-yard wedge shot. The stairs were three-feet wide and five-steps high. He kept trying to hit the whole set of stairs and missed every time. Then I asked him to pick out one step, and then pick out the right or left side of that step. You could see the enormous disbelief on his face when I made him get that specific. Within a few shots he had hit that step. The smaller the target, the more likely you will hit it. Aim small, miss small.

    As you assume your address position, address the target rather than the ball. Get into your address position, looking more often at the target than the ball. Most golfers address the ball, look at the ball and take a qu

    Hmmm... Now What Does He Mean By That?
    The aim of decent listening is to gain maximum understanding. Many people home in only to the words of a speaker or to the body language or the timbre of voice and fail to listen to the entire message. To grasp a message, each of these is important.I recommend that to hear the entire message:1. Ponder the specific words the speaker is saying.2. Establish eye contact with the speaker. It is impossible to read body language without looking at the speaker. Eye contact conveys that you are listening.3. Employ your mind to read his body language. You may intuitively understand it because much of what is sent nonverbally is subconsciously understood. If you think your emotions are coloring your understanding, do an awareness check.4. Observe facial expressions and note how the speaker uses his hands and arms. These will betray information on his nonverbal communication.5. Pay heed to his tone of voice. Is there consistency with his words?6. Interpret the entire message when he has done. Respond to what you think he is saying and then listen carefully to his response to you.Here's an exercise that can skyrocket your communication skills. The next time you
    ish the desired goal. So choose your goal well.

    The athlete always has an awareness of the ball and its exact location. To the observer it may appear that the golf professional is looking at the ball part of the time. That is not actually true. We “look” with our eyes, but we “see” with our minds. That’s why the caption of the picture on the previous page is “Looking at the ball (so it seems) but seeing the target.”

    If you keep the picture of the goal (the target) in mind, your system will respond to that picture and will make every attempt to deliver the ball to your target. Your system will micromanage your body to create the motion necessary to get the job done. Isn't it nice that you no longer have to do the micromanaging? That's the way your system is set up, and you should let it work to your advantage. With no distant target, your system gets lost and the ball becomes the target. Your swing breaks down and your shot is not what you want.

    It is important to comment on the “Nicklaus” aiming technique. This technique is to pick out a small, noticeable bit of something on the ground twelve inches in front of the ball, in line with the distant target. The idea is to “square up” the club face to the bit of something and thus have the club face correctly aimed at the distant target.

    I’ve seen golfers employ this technique, many times to their disadvantage. They have become so enamored with “aiming” at the twelve-inch spot that the spot has become their target. Once they have determined their distant target, they spend the remaining pre-swing time aiming the club at the spot on the ground. They never look at the distant target again! The real target no longer exists to them. This is almost the same as having the ball as their target. They have built the “wall,” not at the ball, but twelve inches in front of the ball.

    The distant target must be the clear picture and the focus of your mind. You can certainly use the “Nicklaus” technique for aiming the club, but be careful that the spot on the ground does not become your target.

    Young people don't need swing instruction. They just need a club, some balls and a pine cone or some other small target to hit the ball to. They will develop the correct swing with no instruction. As if we needed another good reason to never grow up.... Seeing the target is an important point and it needs to be stated another way. Blind people play golf. Imagine yourself as a blind golfer hitting a shot to a green. Your caddie has helped you address the ball. Now he describes your target in detail: the distance, the size of the green, the undulations of the ground, the position of the pin, uphill or downhill, the location of the bunkers and water, etc. As a blind golfer, what will you focus on as you make your swing? It will certainly be the target area, not the ball. Should the process be any different because you can see?

    If you go away with only

    one thing from this book,

    make it the target concept.

    Let's take the target concept from the general to the specific so that you can incorporate it into your game. Standing on the tee trying to hit a 50 yard-wide fairway is really tough because it's too wide; there is no defined target. You'll miss the fairway most of the time. Narrow the target to a tree trunk and you'll still miss the tree trunk most of the time, but you'll easily be in the chosen side of the fairway.

    As you stand on the tee I ask you about your plan and your target. The plan is important; the target is a key component of the plan. It makes the plan possible. The whole concept of target is very important in golf, just as it is in other sports.

    As you stand on the tee and decide on a plan for playing the hole under today's conditions, you need to select a target that makes sense. This target cannot be a broad, vague area. It must be a very specific, narrow target. If your target is a distant tree, hit to the trunk rather than the whole bushy tree. The smaller your target, the more likely you are to hit it.

    Aim small, miss small.

    I was working with a student and asked him to hit a set of stairs that led to another practice tee with a 30-yard wedge shot. The stairs were three-feet wide and five-steps high. He kept trying to hit the whole set of stairs and missed every time. Then I asked him to pick out one step, and then pick out the right or left side of that step. You could see the enormous disbelief on his face when I made him get that specific. Within a few shots he had hit that step. The smaller the target, the more likely you will hit it. Aim small, miss small.

    As you assume your address position, address the target rather than the ball. Get into your address position, looking more often at the target than the ball. Most golfers address the ball, look at the ball and take a qu

    Why Elope?
    When I turned forty years old, I decided it was time to get married. Actually, I had been in a serious relationship for over eighteen years, and my fortieth birthday just felt right. But having a traditional white wedding dress and a million relatives just didn’t seem like the thing to do at my stage in life. So, we decided to elope.Elopement is a tradition in my family. My grandfather eloped in the nineteen thirties, taking a trip to Niagra Falls with his brother as his witness. Mine had even less people; me, my fianc? and the sheriff, along with his secretary who sweetly gave us a copy of the traditional wedding vows in calligraphy on pretty paper.Is elopement for you? What are the advantages of elopement over a traditional wedding? What will you miss out on if you decide to elope?Consider elopement if the following situations fit your life:1) You are an “older” bride, and a large ceremony doesn’t appeal to you. Or, this isn’t your first marriage.2) You and your husband don’t want a religious ceremony.3) Your husband and you have different religions, and there isn’t one singular type of ceremony you can both agree too.4) Your parents don’t agree with you
    ground. They never look at the distant target again! The real target no longer exists to them. This is almost the same as having the ball as their target. They have built the “wall,” not at the ball, but twelve inches in front of the ball.

    The distant target must be the clear picture and the focus of your mind. You can certainly use the “Nicklaus” technique for aiming the club, but be careful that the spot on the ground does not become your target.

    Young people don't need swing instruction. They just need a club, some balls and a pine cone or some other small target to hit the ball to. They will develop the correct swing with no instruction. As if we needed another good reason to never grow up.... Seeing the target is an important point and it needs to be stated another way. Blind people play golf. Imagine yourself as a blind golfer hitting a shot to a green. Your caddie has helped you address the ball. Now he describes your target in detail: the distance, the size of the green, the undulations of the ground, the position of the pin, uphill or downhill, the location of the bunkers and water, etc. As a blind golfer, what will you focus on as you make your swing? It will certainly be the target area, not the ball. Should the process be any different because you can see?

    If you go away with only

    one thing from this book,

    make it the target concept.

    Let's take the target concept from the general to the specific so that you can incorporate it into your game. Standing on the tee trying to hit a 50 yard-wide fairway is really tough because it's too wide; there is no defined target. You'll miss the fairway most of the time. Narrow the target to a tree trunk and you'll still miss the tree trunk most of the time, but you'll easily be in the chosen side of the fairway.

    As you stand on the tee I ask you about your plan and your target. The plan is important; the target is a key component of the plan. It makes the plan possible. The whole concept of target is very important in golf, just as it is in other sports.

    As you stand on the tee and decide on a plan for playing the hole under today's conditions, you need to select a target that makes sense. This target cannot be a broad, vague area. It must be a very specific, narrow target. If your target is a distant tree, hit to the trunk rather than the whole bushy tree. The smaller your target, the more likely you are to hit it.

    Aim small, miss small.

    I was working with a student and asked him to hit a set of stairs that led to another practice tee with a 30-yard wedge shot. The stairs were three-feet wide and five-steps high. He kept trying to hit the whole set of stairs and missed every time. Then I asked him to pick out one step, and then pick out the right or left side of that step. You could see the enormous disbelief on his face when I made him get that specific. Within a few shots he had hit that step. The smaller the target, the more likely you will hit it. Aim small, miss small.

    As you assume your address position, address the target rather than the ball. Get into your address position, looking more often at the target than the ball. Most golfers address the ball, look at the ball and take a qu

    Unsecured Debt Consolidation Loan - The Benefits
    Debt consolidation is a procedure wherein several loans are substituted with just a single loan, which has got a lesser monthly imbursement plan but an extended repayment time period. On the whole there are 2 kinds of debt consolidation - unsecured and secured. In the secured debt consolidation, any kind of possession is kept as a guarantee for the loan for debt consolidation. In case the borrower is not successful in paying back the loan, then she or he will be in a position to lose the guarantee.In unsecured debt consolidation, no investment is made use of as a guarantee. As a result there isn’t any panic of the lender acquiring any direct control on the house of the borrower in the incident of failure to pay of the consolidation loan. In this case, if reimbursements are not done, the borrower has the opportunity to re-negotiate the reimbursement with the lender. There isn’t any panic of the guarantee being gone because of failure to pay of the unsecured loan for debt consolidation.Nevertheless, the rates of interest of the consolidation loans are more often than not a bit higher. A particular benefit of an unsecured loan for debt consolidation is that given that there isn’t any investme
    d target. You'll miss the fairway most of the time. Narrow the target to a tree trunk and you'll still miss the tree trunk most of the time, but you'll easily be in the chosen side of the fairway.

    As you stand on the tee I ask you about your plan and your target. The plan is important; the target is a key component of the plan. It makes the plan possible. The whole concept of target is very important in golf, just as it is in other sports.

    As you stand on the tee and decide on a plan for playing the hole under today's conditions, you need to select a target that makes sense. This target cannot be a broad, vague area. It must be a very specific, narrow target. If your target is a distant tree, hit to the trunk rather than the whole bushy tree. The smaller your target, the more likely you are to hit it.

    Aim small, miss small.

    I was working with a student and asked him to hit a set of stairs that led to another practice tee with a 30-yard wedge shot. The stairs were three-feet wide and five-steps high. He kept trying to hit the whole set of stairs and missed every time. Then I asked him to pick out one step, and then pick out the right or left side of that step. You could see the enormous disbelief on his face when I made him get that specific. Within a few shots he had hit that step. The smaller the target, the more likely you will hit it. Aim small, miss small.

    As you assume your address position, address the target rather than the ball. Get into your address position, looking more often at the target than the ball. Most golfers address the ball, look at the ball and take a quick glance at the target to see if it has moved. Now, reverse that; set up looking at the target, then glance at the ball. Spend a lot of time looking at the target, then a quick glance at the ball, then swing.

    Concept Golf students are trained to think this way from the moment training begins on the putting green. In order to help them get a feel for the distance, I ask them to look at the hole while they make ten-foot putts. At first they look like they have just lost their best friend. After they give it a try, they can't wait to take it on the course; some are still putting that way after several years. It works! With the full swing it is not physically reasonable to look at the target during the backswing. The neck is not flexible enough to allow us to look at the target and make a full backswing. So it is necessary to memorize exactly where the target is and visualize it during the swing.

    However, I encourage my students to “look up” (to look at the target) as soon as they begin the forward-swing. They don’t miss the ball. Instead, they actually deliver the ball to the target. Their swing flows naturally to a full finish because their intent is to deliver the ball to the target rather than try to hit the ball.

    I had this target discussion with a left-handed female student who was brand new to the game. When we went to the range to hit balls she really zeroed in on the target and NEVER looked at the ball. She teed up a ball, set her club behind the ball and looked at the target and never looked back at the ball. She never missed the ball and hit many good shots right at her target.

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