justcallmeharry said:
whisperingbill said:
Ok, it's been 16 days. What did the OP do?... Is there an attempt being made ?
He is still at the range - going on 400 hours of nonstop practice and instruction.
Haha, yes I've been procrastinating checking back in for a while now. Honestly when it got to about a page of replies I put a pause on the reading - because I wanted to pick a strategy and work on implementing it without getting to bogged down in the differing recommendations. And also because I knew that I'd want to respond meticulously and that it would take some time (insert "I'm happy for you/or sorry that happened" meme for the incoming long post).
So here goes, here's my report:
THE INITIAL THOUGHT PROCESSFirst things first - thank you all very much for your feedback. It seems like the initial responses were pretty split between the camp of "yes it can be done, it's just going to take a ridiculous amount of work you may not be willing to put in" and "don't even try, drive the cart and drink beer." Honestly that's exactly the question I was asking, so I went back and forth debating whether to try or not. In the end though, I thought aggiepaintrain had the solution:
aggiepaintrain said:
Go get some lessons, if you can get the ball airborne and straight with a 5,7,9 iron consistently with distance then have a go. If you can't, then I'd just be a designated cart driver and have fun watching your friends.
I had a couple months to see what happened - if it wasn't going where I wanted it to, then at least I could say I tried golf and it wasn't for me. But a couple of y'all saw something bigger at stake than just one trip, and I think that could be important:
AggieDruggist89 said:
Don't take 20 practice swings. Once you get set up, just hit ball instead of standing there for 5 minutes fidgeting.
Better yet, save you some money and you probably shouldn't play.
Don't go on a golf trip if you're not a golfer.
But this is what will happen. Those best friends of yours who golf will most likely remain lifelong golf buddies and take wonderful golf trips together. If you learn to golf, you will participate. If you don't, most likely you will not spend as much time together in the future.
THE FRAME OF REFERENCE98Ag99Grad said:
Your friends know you can't play right?
There was a lot of commenting that I was just going to waste everyone's time, that I was going to frustrate myself and my friends, that I would ruin a good golf outing. But here's the thing you've got to keep in mind:
my friends know I have never golfed, yet they keep encouraging me to play. So however you want to look at it; it's one of
those kinds of trips. While yes, they are excited to play golf in Arizona, at the nicest course they've played at - the outing is more about us hanging out and having fun than it is about golf.
I don't know their handicaps or how to quantify their skill level. I will say though that I watched three of the guys who will be on this trip play a week before I created the thread: two of them are good, I don't know if I have the potential to ever be at that level no matter how much I practice. But one of them
is not good. And he's kind of what made me even think to give this a try. As hard as I imagined golf to be, I still felt like I could probably get to his level pretty quickly if I put in enough reps.
THE PLANA lot of suggestions to get a coach, and I'd have been looking for one even without the advice. Unfortunately I was very much delayed in getting started with a coach - I contacted two different coaches; one was delayed due to medical status and the other was
terrible with getting back to me to look at the schedule like he said he would. Finally I was able to get something worked out with one of them, but it cost me two weeks.
During this two weeks I actually did go out to a range with two different friends (not ones going on the trip) and hit some balls. Between some YouTube videos, these two friends tips/suggestions, and some tweaking of my form:
I was terrible. Honestly after those two sessions (and getting progressively worse) I was pretty much ready to quit and
take Willy Wonka's advice. However, I did eventually get the initial lesson with the golf coach scheduled last week and I figured I'd at least go to one less.
THE LESSONAs I just mentioned, before that lesson I was pretty sure I was going to quit and never pick up a golf club again.
After that lesson I'm afraid that I might eventually become a golfer (I always kind of made fun of golf...)
And I might actually be able to pull off this thing in 52 days.
At the lesson he had me swing a few times (all shots either went at a 45 degree angle to the right or barely rolled off the mat) and then he made a few slight corrections to my stance and then spent the next good while just talking. About the mechanics of golf and the swing. Just some low level stuff, but stuff I hadn't heard or hadn't fully clicked with. After he talked for about 10 minutes he asked me to get back up there and swing. Somehow I hit
by far the best shot I'd ever hit - straight down the range in the air over 100 yards. I was legitimately shocked and he said "okay your lesson is done, now you can golf in Arizona without embarrassing yourself." (Tongue-in-cheek of course)
As we went on I regressed from that first shot as we went back to fixing other things, but even so, probably 95% of the shots I hit were better than anything I'd done in the prior two range sessions. And I wound up hitting some better shots than that first one by the end of the lesson.
THE AFTERMATHSince then, I haven't missed a day of going to the range and hitting a big bucket of balls. I'm still pushing most of my shots to the right, but not nearly as bad as I used to and I'm consistently getting the balls in the air. Heck, I may hit nothing but a 7 iron from tee box to the hole, but I think I can play in Arizona.
My plan is to try to go to the range 5+ days a week, and have one lesson a week (next one is Friday) until this coach suggests something else. I don't know how to drive, I don't know how to putt, I don't know how to chip. Who knows - maybe those things will overload my brain and I'll regress and decide not to play after all. Maybe I can do without them. But at the very least I might have a new hobby after this bachelor party, whether I wind up playing on that trip or not.