The Cast Iron Park Bench

April 14, 2009

Why Do We Dislike Algebra?

Filed under: Uncategorized @ 5:03 pm

Algebra traces relationships between things that diverge over time. These variables include matters such as the relationship between supply of an a product and its price. Math is not an easy subject for a large percentage of students. Many software applications are available with a mixture of subject field demonstration so students able to handle any capacity of learning algebra can work around the subject without difficulty. These software titles also facilitates students to comprehend importance of Algebra in real life as well as in industry field. Greater functions employed in algebra include Graphing non-linear inequalities , Solving compound inequalities, Solving quadratic inequalities , Adding and Subtracting matrices etc.
Algebra is an important area of study but students can be discouraged initially if they do not work hard enough in early stages. This makes fundamental math skills vital to help students successfully progress from algebra and promote into more high-level math with authority.

How to Excel in Algebra

The algebra software on offer in the market today offer far more useful guidelines and help than what is included in formal textbooks, such as homework help, interactive lesson plans, games and a worksheet tool or graphing calculator. The high quality software will have all these features as well as easy usability and coverage of wide area of themes.

The teaching tools are always useful when methods like text, audio, animation, video and games are put in to use. All the important topics should also be covered from Pre-Algebra through Algebra II. Important topics in these courses are: Finding complement of an angle, inverse of functions, finding type of polynomial, determine if line is , determine if line is parallel, determine if parabola opens up, determine if relation is a functions etc.

How to Use Algebra Software

Some algebraic software would only show results, while other (much more suitable for elementary algebra) show all the steps as well as explanations of mathematical basics that are being used. Students mostly concern over the ease of use of software. Thus, the software better be loaded with value added features like high quality and timely user support, enclosed help options, and easily laid out algebra wizards.

Create a Strong Golf Mind: How to Get in the Zone

Filed under: Uncategorized @ 3:13 pm

Today’s article focuses on golf and that much talked about mental part. Golf, like any sport, is 90% mental. The top PGA players work just as hard on their mental game as they do on their swing. Having a strong golf mind is called being in “the zone”, and even weekend hackers have been in the zone at one time or another. The difference between them and the pro’s is that the pro’s are locked in “the zone” a lot more than amateurs because they work at it. Let’s discuss some of the important mental components of golf. If you work on these things, you will see an improvement in your scores.

1. Swing Thoughts

A swing thought is any swing related thought that invades a golfers mind upon addressing the ball, such as the back swing, foot position or follow through. How many times have you addressed the ball and said to yourself, “ah, now I know what I’m doing wrong; I have to shorten my backswing or, I’m not turning my shoulders enough, or I’m coming through the ball too quickly? In other words, how many times have you actually worked on your swing during a round of golf?

Whenever a swing thought such as these sneaks its way into a golfers mind, the one thing the golfer is not focusing on is the most important thing of allthe shot itself. Recently, Tiger Woods was asked what he’s thinking as he’s about to take a shot. Innocently, this is what he said: “Where I want the ball to go. What else would I be thinking?”
Ben Hogan, another one of the golf greats said, “If I have two swing thoughts I have no chance of hitting a good shot; if I have one swing thought maybe I’ll hit a good shot; if I have no swing thoughts then I can play like Ben Hogan. The key here is to leave your swing thoughts at the range. Trust your swing when you’re out on the course, imagine where you want the ball to go and take a hack at it. That’s it.

2. Shot Thoughts

Let’s say you have to carry a shot over a lake. This can be nerve racking for any golfer because the last thing you want to do is top the ball and watch it nose-dive into the lake. Now, weekend duffers can go a whole round without topping a single ball but when a lake stands in their way, guess what happens? That’s right, they top the darn thing. Why? It has everything to do with what they’re thinking. As they’re addressing the ball, they’re probably saying to themselves, “I better not hit this shot in the lake.” Automatically, whenever you say something like this to yourself, the mind will produce an image of the ball nose-diving into the lake. This is how the mind works. Focusing on what you do “not” want to do automatically creates images of just that. Focus on what you want to do and you’ll see improvement.

3. Letting go of bad shots

Most high handicappers have a problem shaking off a bad shot they’ve just hit. And guess what happens? They wind-up taking their frustrations with them to the next shot. This is a golden ticket to hitting a bad shot again, and again, and again. So the next time you duff a ball or hit one fat or deposit it into a lake, forget about it. Let it go. If you don’t, you’re never going to be able to concentrate effectively on the shots that lay ahead.

4. Relax

Ok, this is probably the most important part of a golf swing. The majority of the time, a golfer has no idea how his body feels. He has no idea that there may be tension in his shoulders, arm and legs. He has no idea that the two food putt he just missed has got him so upset that tension is invading his muscles. Why is this a problem? Because tension screws-up a golf swing. The first thing I teach all of my golf clients is to take a couple of deep breaths before every shot and imagine tension and stress melting away; imagine feeling smooth and relaxed.

In summary, the mind is more important than your R7 driver, your pro V1 golf balls and even the swing itself. The key is to have what I call a pre-shot mental routine before every shot. Make sure the body and mind are relaxed; make sure there are no swing thoughts or negative thoughts about bad shot you’ve hit; visualize the shot you want to hit; and finally, take your swing. Practice these techniques and you will get “in the zone.”

Dr. Tom Kersting is the author of FAT PROOF: Power Programming your bodies weight-loss computer (Harbor Press, coming in winter 2007). Dr. Tom is the creator of the power programming mind system and uses his techniques for weight-loss, stress and athletic performance. Please visit his website, http://www.fatproof.net to learn more about how power programming can help you improve your golf game. pick up his Lessons For The Mind Golf CD today.

Thomas Kersting - EzineArticles Expert Author

Debunking Popular Golf Myths

Filed under: Uncategorized @ 1:42 pm

Golf is replete with myths. Covering everything from driving to course management, these myths are passed down from father to son, some in the form of golf tips on swing mechanics, others in the form of wise advice on how to do things. Unfortunately, many of these myths are just plain wrong.

Below are three popular myths I like to debunk in my golf lessons and golf tips. One or two of them may have an element of truth in them. The other may have no truth in it at all. Regardless, all of them embody ideas that can elevate scores and boost golf handicaps.

1. Aim at the Target

We’ve all heard this statement before. Maybe even said it. The statement isn’t so much mythic as it is confusing. The question is, aim what at the target? Your clubface? Your shoulders? Your body? The statement doesn’t really say.

The problem with this myth is that it can cause people to misalign themselves in one of two ways, hurting his or her golf handicap.

• aiming the feet, hips, knees, and shoulders directly at the target, leaving the clubface following a line well right of the target; or,

• aiming to compensate for ballflight errors, like when you aim left to compensate for the ballflight error of a slice (for right handers).

When aimed correctly, the leading edge of the clubface sits at a right angle to the target line while your body aligns parallel-left of the target line. This set up establishes perfect parallel alignment. This position doesn’t come naturally. So you need to work on it on the range to recognize when you’re aiming correctly on the course.

Here’s a drill I use in my golf instruction sessions. First, pick a target and lay one club down on the ground a few feet in front of the ball, but on the target line. Then, take a second club and lay it down parallel to the first but along your toe line to indicate body alignment. Make adjustments as necessary. Finally, hit a few balls and see what happens. After awhile you’ll have trained your body and eyes to accept this new alignment.

2. As the swing gets longer, it gets faster

If you’re like most golfers, you swing the driver faster than the 7-iron or 8-iron. Most of us invariably ramp up our swing speed with longer clubs because we envision hitting the ball harder and driving it farther. It’s a natural tendency, one I often see when giving golf lessons.

Unfortunately, when you ramp up your swing speed, you destroy your natural swing tempothe total amount of time it takes to create your swing from beginning to end. That’s not good. When you start varying your swing’s tempo from club to club, you destroy the timing required to hit consistent golf shots. It’s one reason why you feel that you can hit your irons well one-day but not your woods, and vice versa.

All of us have our own swing tempo. Some of us have a fast tempo, like Nick Price. Some of us have a slower tempo, like Fred Couples. Either way is fine, as long as you keep the same tempo for each club in the bag. It’s not something you control. If it takes two seconds to hit the pitching wedge, it should take you two seconds to hit the driver. Practice consistent tempo with all your clubs and you’ll hit consistent shots.

3. Play the ball back with shorter clubs

Most of us vary ball position as we change clubs. The shorter the club, the farther back we position the ball. But incorrect ball positioning can create major problems. With the ball positioned too far forward, our shoulders tend to align too far left of forward. Since your club swings where our shoulders point, we slice. With the ball positioned too far back, our shoulders tend to close, encouraging a push or a hook.

While you should position the ball more forward for the driver than the pitching wedge, you should never place the ball farther back than center for any normal shot with a level lie, regardless of the club you’re using.

Remember, for normal shots on level lies, there are just three basic ball positions;

• Short iron: one inch left of center
• Mid-irons: two inches left of center
• Long irons & woods: three inches left of center.

In addition, always relate the position of the ball to your upper body, not your toes. Using your toes can create the illusion that the ball is positioned correctly when in fact it isn’t. For example, if you use your toes to position the ball with your foot flared out but then close up your foot, the ball seems to move forward in your stance, when it actually hasn’t.

These are just three of the more popular golf myths that exist, many of which I address in my golf lessons and golf tips. There are lots more. Unfortunately, many of them are just plain wrong.

So be wary of them. And don’t be afraid to challenge them. Even if you’re wrong, the worse thing that can happen is that you can learn something valuable about the game of golf.

Jack Moorehouse is the author of the best-selling book “How To Break 80 And Shoot Like The Pros.” He is NOT a golf pro, rather a working man that has helped thousands of golfers from all seven continents lower their handicap immediately. He has a free weekly newsletter with the latest golf tips, golf lessons and golf instruction.

Do You Need A Golf Travel Bag?

Filed under: Uncategorized @ 5:48 am

How much are your golf clubs worth to you? Some of us have expensive custom made clubs, while others own a more affordable set. Whatever the retail value–our own clubs are what help us play our best game, so they are valuable to us. That’s why the Pros always bring their own clubs on tour.

Enjoy playing golf on that holiday trip by doing what you can to protect your clubs from damage while traveling. Here are a few tips when trying to choose the best golf travel bag for your situation.

Hard Travel Cases

The case is a hard plastic shell that provides the most protection from drops and falls. These are the ideal choice when traveling by air. You won’t be able to carry your clubs on the plane with you, so you’ll want the best protection you can get with the baggage handling process involved. It can get rough down there!

Soft Travel Cases

Made from more pliant fabric, these are more car friendly since the outer shell is more flexible. Look for bags that use double stitching as this provides a sturdier hold.

Wheels

Carry your golf travel bag around for a bit and you’ll be wishing it had wheels. Imagine walking what seems like miles through a busy airport while carrying your golf clubs–inline wheels are a must.

Handles & Straps

Look for sturdy, double stitched handles and straps that will easily hold the weight against pulling and lifting.

Padding

Watch that the bag has some amount of foam padding. This will absorb much of the shock from a drop or from heavy banging.

Traveling and playing with our own golf clubs beats renting clubs hands down! By using a golf travel case, you’ll be protecting your clubs from damage and ensuring you have them when you need them most–on the golf course!

Permissions: Feel free to use and reprint this article on the condition that all content, links and anchor text are kept intact and unaltered in any way.

You can find plenty of selections of golf travel cases at http://golfingfanatic.com – see our selections of golf items found online.
Copyright GolfingFanatic.com

April 11, 2009

Golf Hypnosis Can Put You in the Zone

Filed under: Uncategorized @ 12:53 pm

O.k., I thought I was going to be the one to break this next
secret to you but the cat has already been let out of the
bag with the June 2005 issue of Golf Magazine. I’m sure it’s
been written about in other articles and golf books before
but this was the first time I’d read one about a non-pro
golfer using a hypnotist for his golf game.

I know, I know, now you really think I’m a loony bird right?

Well, in case you didn’t know, Tiger Woods has been using golf hypnosis for his game for years as have many other top pros.
This is starting to get big let me tell you. Especially for the weekend golfer.

So what the heck is golf hypnosis I’m sure you’re asking? Well, what it isn’t is a stage act where a guy in a black coat and spinning watch can “make” people do things they wouldn’t ordinarily do while “under his power.” This is all fun and
games and good entertainment but it is not therapeutic hypnosis.

Dr. James Braid was the first to use the
word “hypnosis.” He later tried to change the name to
Monoideaism which means: “to focus on a single thought.”
That’s really what hypnosis is.For practical purposes and for
our golf, it can further be
described as a state of heightened suggestibility.
It’s about using your unconscious mind to
play golf automatically and without thinking.

I am a certified hypnotherapist and use
some of these concepts for mine and my client’s golf games.
It’s very exciting to think that we can actually get control of
our thoughts and emotions on the course and direct them toward
playing our best using golf hypnosis.

In case you’re thinking that this hypnosis thing is a bunch
of hippies on drugs or something crazy like that, I should
tell you that both the American and British Medical
Associations have recognized hypnosis as a valuable tool in
medicine and psychology. You may have heard that people get
hypnotized to lose weight or quit habits like smoking or
chewing their fingernails. But did you know that it is used
in surgical procedures and childbirth for pain instead of
anesthesia? Yep, it’s true, go check it out on the web, the
info is all out there.

There is absolutely nothing to be afraid of with hypnosis. In fact, you or your kids experience it regularly while watching movies or t.v.

Basically, for golf, hypnosis is used to help get your
conscious mind out of the way when you’re about to swing.
And it is also used off the course to help send messages
down into your unconscious that will come back out and let
you play at your optimal mental state when on the course.

A couple of other things about hypnosis:

1. You cannot be “hypnotized” unless you want to be.

2. You are never under anyone else’s control

3. You will always be able to become fully awake
at any time, whenever you want.

4. Most everyone has already been in some form of hypnotic
state. A good example is when you stare at something for
no apparent reason and your mind just kind of stops thinking
for a short time.

Bottom line here for golf hypnosis…

You can learn some very good concepts about how your mind
works that can be put to use on the course for emotional
management and playing golf with your automatic subconscious
mind. That is where CONSISTENCY is located within you!

Craig Sigl - EzineArticles Expert Author

Craig Sigl teaches how you can score lower Without Practice and The Legends of Golf teach fundamentals. For details and to claim a free digitized paperback book: “How You Can Play Better Golf Using Self-hypnosis” visit:
Golf instruction tips website

April 10, 2009

How Did Barrister Bookcases Come into Existence? – It’s Hypnotic

Filed under: Uncategorized @ 11:00 am

Whenever you go into a library you are entranced by the huge bookcases that are home to a powerhouse of information- record books! Bookcases help in stacking away literature and saving them from wear and tear. Bookcases generally have flat compartments for keeping publications. Outside glass doors are a good selection to refer and stock publications neatly.

Tell me about a oak barrister bookcase.

Barristers or lawyers need to make use of several heavy and grand books in the course of their practice. such reference manuals cost alot and are necessary often. Barristers bookcases are hardy and maintain good usefulness for a lawyer.They are also known as attorneys bookcases and can be created in oak wood, cherry wood in several finishes and colorings.

What was the method of keeping books prior to barrister bookcases?

Books were rare in the past, and therefore there was no demand for a bookcase then. Books employed to be penned by hand in the past. rich individuals who owned them stored them in reachable containers. It was the rich mans privilege to own and carry books as they were not inexpensive. Such boxes fulfilled the demand for a bookcase.

As time passed, these manuscript volumes were owned by lots of such clergymen and affluent individuals in a large number. Thus the books had to be located inside a cupboard.The bookshelves that we see Now are an offspring of these closets in the past, without the doors.

What technique was employed for stashing away books?

These books were not located with a modern approach. They utilized to be piled upon each other on their sides or kept upright with their edges on the outside and the backs facing the wall. A band of vellum or leather was used for inscription of the title and also closed the book.This band was located on the front edge and therefore the books were put with their bounds facing out.

anybody who liked learning could buy books due to the publishing conception.Another added benefit of publishing was that the publishing firms printed the title on the back of the record so that the edges were placed inwards.

Such cases were made of what materials?

These barrister bookcases utilised to consist of oak commonly. Other than that, maple, cherry and pine wood were also utilized for producing a barrister bookcase. A steel barrister bookcase is long-lasting and low on maintenance too. The Bodleian Library at Oxford University households the earliest bookcases. they were kept in the library in the sixteenth century.

Chippendale and Sheraton were the leading bookcase designers who created the most beautiful bookcases.These bookcases indeed added to the elegance of the room.

Nows Barrister Bookcases.

It is genuinely amazing to know about the travel of how a humble bookshelf has grown up to being a barrister bookcase over a point of time!

Sources bookshelves on twitter

April 9, 2009

With the Right Hotel, Extend Your Stay in St. Louis

Filed under: Uncategorized @ 9:10 pm

If you are traveling to St. Louis, Mo., for an extended business trip, or have to spend time in the city for family matters, you may find yourself in the needing a house rental or a hotel. If you are staying in St. Louis for more than 10 days but less than two months, an extended stay hotel may be a good option for you. Extended stay hotels offer special services and amenities to make your long visit comfortable and as close to home as you can get. The rooms are a little larger than normal motel or hotel rooms and will have a kitchenette with a stove, oven, microwave and refrigerator so you can do your own cooking, store away dry goods and refrigerate things like milk, eggs and leftovers. They also provide wireless Internet and indoor gyms for your convenience.

There are a few different extended stay hotels in the St. Louis area. The Extended Stay American chain has a few hotels in and around the city of St. Louis. You can also book your extended stay at Staybridge Suites St. Louis Extended Stay Hotel as well as the Candlewood Suites Extended Stay Hotel. Both offer low-cost options for lengthy stays in the Gateway City.

April 8, 2009

Go on and Try to Use the Natures Energy for Self Help this Summer

Filed under: Uncategorized @ 2:56 pm

When you are pondering about bettering yourself, all that is known as life coaching. Because if you are a spiritual girl, then you might understand the value in universal energy and how this will assist you to move forward near to your self help goals. By working with the wonderful power of the universe you may attract love into your spectacular life. Find out how to boost self esteem with a life coach.

As you may already know, you are cosmic energy. Everything you hear and smell is cosmic energy and might well be tweaked to assist you along your self growth journey. Once you fully respect that cosmic energy is everywhere, you might often work with cosmic energy in all situations to improve your life. Learn Tarot Cards online with Anne Jirsch.

So that if you have mild panic and anxiety attacks or you suffer from self esteem issues, you may wish to get yourself an awesome life coach who will often assist you through the condition with holistic therapies like hypnotherapy. And of course, give you the marvellous guidance and advice on using universal energy, the lifestyle coach can often be a fantastic assist in helping you obtain your personal growth goals.

You might well also discover how to achieve your entire potential and happiness in your lifetime and how to connect to your better self. The lifestyle coach might use age progression and past life regression to assist you understand the issues you face at this time.

The Target Principle

Filed under: Uncategorized @ 6:00 am

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 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.

John Toepel is a Veteran PGA Tour Player, instructor, author, and professional speaker. He is also the discoverer of Concept Golf, the quickest way to immediate, life-long lasting improvements to anyone’s golf game. To learn more about Concept Golf, including the most comprehensive golf instruction system ever, “The Concept Golf Perfect Shot Making System”, please visit http://www.conceptgolf.com/PSMS.htm and Discover the Par Golfer in You!

April 3, 2009

Beating the Fairway Sandtrap

Filed under: Uncategorized @ 4:45 pm

Many recreational golfers struggle with shots out of fairway bunkers. This is because it is a difficult shot and many golfers do not practice for this type of shot. Without practicing this shot, an errant tee shot into a fairway bunker seals certain doom for the recreational golfer.

The recreational golfer immediately starts thinking of how he or she will hit the ball with too much sand and come up way short or hit the ball thin and the ball will hit the face of the bunker. Instead of complaining to yourself or your buddies because you know that you cannot hit this shot anywhere near the green, simply practice this tip to success out of fairway bunkers.

-Place the ball 1 or 2 balls back from the middle of your stance.

-Dig in with your feet into the sand.

-Place 60% of your weight on your front leg and 40% on your back leg. This will prevent you from leaning back on your back leg and hitting the ball fat.

-Use your normal swing while keeping 60% of your weight on your front side and concentrate on keeping your eye on contact with the ball.

-Practice regularly and enjoy the moment of hearing your golf buddies congratulate you on a great shot.

Adam Beach

Golfideas.com Owner

1.757.898.7344

http://www.golfideas.com

“Clone Or No Clone The Ball Doesn’t Care!!”

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