LynnBlakeGolf Forums - View Single Post - Making a Decision... Thread: Making a Decision... View Single Post #8 03-23-2005, 01:54 PM psheehan Senior Member Join Date: Jan 2005 Location: Mt. Pleasant, South Carolina Posts: 121 Re: Making a Decision... Originally Posted by Martee At what point do you make a decision as to what golf philosphy, instruction, method, style you are going to adopt as your mainstay? Bouncing from one golf philosphy or instruction to another will certainly without a doubt lead to confusion at best and at worst totally incompatible parts. The approach of shopping around for an answer to a fault, to how to perform the correct stroke, how to do anything appears to be a hap hazard method. To me it seems golfers out there are still seeking the secret, much as they continue to go through equipment and training aids. If it works for the moment, great, if not on to the next. If it had worked but now doesn't throw it away and find something else. I see posters visiting a half dozen or more forums, posting the same question. After getting various responses, that same poster is back in a few days with another question, again spread across the forums seeking another answer. Based on their response back it seem the posters are approaching building, maintaining and reparing their golf stroke as a smorgasbord, take something from here, then jump over here and take something from there, etc. Where is the master plan, blueprint, the controls and restrictions, the guidelines and definitions to ensure what is being constructed is in fact solid? I equate this to just kind of wandering aimlessly, chasing what sounds good and just plain hoping that you can hit on the right combination to find something that works. Am I alone in this observation? Reviewing and gathering all this information, doesn't it lead to information overload, confusion at times? I fully understand golf intructors need to seek out the information so they can be better prepared to work with students, understand the students golf stroke and where the student is coming from, but for the student, how many, how much is needed to know? How do you decide or do you decide to define your basic stroke, your blueprint upon which you build your golf stroke? The other question is do you have a blueprint or defined golf stroke flavor you are building, maintaining, etc.? Do you have a source to aid you or is it multiple sources? If multiple, why? Martee, First, I've bounced about more than the average Joe in search of the holy grail of golf. It is very ironic I never happened on the yellow book in that search because it likely would have appealed to me. I've been to several 'name' schools and had other individual lessons from some well known and maybe lesser known good instructors. The result was always the same.... chase some feel or swing thought for a few months with varying degrees of sucess. Until I read enough on GEA, TGM and Chuck Evans to believe that Yoda and YodasLuke were onto something. In fairness, I wouldn't have found it if I hadn't kept searching.... but at this point I think I am working on a efficient hitting stroke only....since I'm 58 I doubt there is time to do much else and since it seems to work well I don't think I need more than hitting in my game. I've seen Ted Fort once, and I'm sure I'll be back to see him again. Hopefully in the late summer or fall to tighten things up. It was the best experience I've had with a teacher. It seems to me that all golfers are trying to do the same thing.... control the flight of the golf ball. When you finally find a way to compress the golf ball and make it go where you want... I think you stay with that system, no matter what it may be. TGM is the only thing I've found that allows me to repeatably control a golf ball.... I'm here for good. Patrick psheehan View Public Profile Send a private message to psheehan Find all posts by psheehan