Originally Posted by Richie3Jack
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You're not the only one. When I started re-reading TGM (the first time I read it was about 12 years ago and I only understood about 4 pages of it) and I then asked around for some help and finally started to understand most of it, I had a bunch of those 'head slapping' moments/it makes so much sense it's silly moments.
I think I took basic Geometry about 15 years ago. I've never taken a physics course. And I went to a school that I loved going to (Coastal Carolina University), but won't be confused for MIT anytime soon. Yet, even I managed to comprehend TGM.
People interested in TGM just need to stop listening to those who never really investigated TGM who bad mouth it or claim that you need to be Albert Einstein to understand the yellow book.
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Homer Kelley was my personal mentor.
The Golfing Machine, his gift to golf, has been my constant reference for thirty years.
Given that birthright and thousands of hours on the lesson tee, I know that . . .
If you can
walk straight-ahead and
swing your arms
side-to-side, you can play a very satisfactory game of golf. One, most probably, better than you are playing now.
I made a similar statement a couple of years ago in response to a challenging post written by one of our more 'technical' members. In keeping with his equally inflamatory personality, the young man took umbrage and left the site.
With all due respect to our late friend and those who would argue likewise, golf is a
natural game that 'we the people' screw up with an incredible number of
unnatural notions and alignments.
My business is turning Madness into Mechanics and Mechanics into Miracles.
Today, working with a late-fifties Chicago man with two removed spinal discs, we exchanged weak, 'dying quails' to the right for strong, draw shots seeking fairway and pin. He dropped twenty years and added thirty yards. We exchanged 'high fives' time and again.
It's what he came and paid for.
It's what I'm here and live for.
Working together, we made it happen.
