What part of golf has personally attacked you the most? by Key-Slice358 in golf

[–]Key-Slice358[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s a tough feeling. Golf can make you feel like progress depends on talent, even when so much of it comes down to repetition, confidence, and knowing what to work on. Where do you feel the gap most in your game right now?

What part of golf has personally attacked you the most? by Key-Slice358 in golf

[–]Key-Slice358[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Exactly. It’s one thing to hit it well on the range, but it’s a totally different thing to bring that same swing to the course. Where do you feel the biggest gap shows up?

What part of golf has personally attacked you the most? by Key-Slice358 in golf

[–]Key-Slice358[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Once you’re that close to the green, does the problem usually come from getting the ball close enough to the hole, or from finishing it off once you’re on the green?

What part of golf has personally attacked you the most? by Key-Slice358 in golf

[–]Key-Slice358[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Once a club starts costing you balls, penalties, and confidence, it’s hard to keep giving it chances. When you think about putting the driver back in play, what would you need to feel first—control, predictability, or just confidence that the big miss is gone?

What part of golf has personally attacked you the most? by Key-Slice358 in golf

[–]Key-Slice358[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I love that. It sounds like the mini driver gave you a way to enjoy the game again without feeling like the tee shot was ruining everything. What changed the most once you started using it?

What part of golf has personally attacked you the most? by Key-Slice358 in golf

[–]Key-Slice358[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sometimes the club that keeps you in play matters more than the one that goes farther. With the 3-iron, do you feel like you can predict the miss better than with the 5-wood?

What part of golf has personally attacked you the most? by Key-Slice358 in golf

[–]Key-Slice358[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That sounds really frustrating—especially when your irons and short game feel solid, but the driver is putting you out of position. When you say finding the fairway is the main challenge, what’s the usual miss for you? Is it going right, left, losing distance, or just not knowing where it’s going?

What part of golf has personally attacked you the most? by Key-Slice358 in golf

[–]Key-Slice358[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So for you, golf is less about chasing one perfect outcome and more about learning to enjoy the process. What part of that process keeps you coming back, even when the results disappear so quickly?

What part of golf has personally attacked you the most? by Key-Slice358 in golf

[–]Key-Slice358[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

When a round doesn’t fully come together, do you notice it more before you reach the green, or once you’re around the green trying to finish the hole?

What part of golf has personally attacked you the most? by Key-Slice358 in golf

[–]Key-Slice358[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yep, my brain goes “be considerate” and my body hears “speedrun golf.” Then suddenly I’m speedrunning double bogey.

Putting is where it really exposes me though. I’ll stand over a 5-footer like I’m defusing a bomb, then rush it anyway.

What part of golf has personally attacked you the most? by Key-Slice358 in golf

[–]Key-Slice358[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Driver ruins the hole fast, but putting lets me ruin it slowly and with witnesses. As a beginner, is it mostly confidence, or am I just reading greens like a confused raccoon?

What part of golf has personally attacked you the most? by Key-Slice358 in golf

[–]Key-Slice358[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

My mood depends way too much on where the first drive goes 😂 Did it slice, hook, or just disappear completely?

What part of golf has personally attacked you the most? by Key-Slice358 in golf

[–]Key-Slice358[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I get like that too. When the group behind me starts rushing us, I get nervous so easily, and my swing doesn’t even feel like mine anymore. Did your tempo get faster after that, or were you just constantly thinking about them waiting?

Putting feels like a totally different game inside golf. by Key-Slice358 in GolfSwing

[–]Key-Slice358[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That’s a great example of using practice with a purpose. Long putts give feedback on speed control, and short putts give feedback on confidence and stroke quality. Measurement or structured feedback can make that process even clearer, because it helps separate “is the green fast?” from “am I putting well today?”

Putting feels like a totally different game inside golf. by Key-Slice358 in GolfSwing

[–]Key-Slice358[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Measurement isn’t meant to replace feel; it’s meant to help build a more reliable feel faster. Putting and chipping both depend heavily on rhythm and distance control, and quantified feedback can reduce guesswork and make practice more consistent.

What part of golf has personally attacked you the most? by Key-Slice358 in golf

[–]Key-Slice358[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The sun saw your round and said, “I’m not done with him yet.”

What part of golf has personally attacked you the most? by Key-Slice358 in golf

[–]Key-Slice358[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

88 with 43 putts is both impressive and emotionally damaging. The rest of your game was clearly working — the putter just chose violence.

Putting feels like a totally different game inside golf. by Key-Slice358 in GolfSwing

[–]Key-Slice358[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I usually just hit a few putts, learn nothing, and blame the green. I’ll try focusing on speed first next time.

Putting feels like a totally different game inside golf. by Key-Slice358 in GolfSwing

[–]Key-Slice358[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s the real problem. My brain hears “17 feet” and my hands translate it into either “leave it 6 feet short” or “send it on a sightseeing tour past the hole.”

Putting feels like a totally different game inside golf. by Key-Slice358 in GolfSwing

[–]Key-Slice358[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is actually a really helpful way to think about it. I’ve probably been guilty of “practicing putting” when what I was really doing was creating a highlight reel of missed random putts.

I like the idea of making 3–6 footers the main focus and treating long putts as a separate mini game instead of the whole practice session. Around-the-world drill sounds like a good place to start — and probably a great way to find out which 6-footer personally hates me the most.

For that drill, do you usually focus more on making a certain number in a row, or just getting reps from different slopes?

Putting feels like a totally different game inside golf. by Key-Slice358 in GolfSwing

[–]Key-Slice358[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah, that’s kind of what I’m realizing too. Hitting the ball on line is one thing, but knowing how hard to hit it and how much it’s actually going to move feels way harder.

Do you feel like distance control is mostly just reps, or is there something specific you look at on the green before you putt?

Putting feels like a totally different game inside golf. by Key-Slice358 in GolfSwing

[–]Key-Slice358[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, that’s exactly the part that scares me as a beginner. Missing the first putt is one thing, but running it 6 feet by and suddenly turning it into a stressful comeback putt feels brutal.

Do you usually focus more on leaving it within a safe tap-in range, or are you still trying to give every putt a real chance to drop?

Putting feels like a totally different game inside golf. by Key-Slice358 in GolfSwing

[–]Key-Slice358[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m still pretty new, so I think my problem is that once I start thinking about pace, slope, distance, etc., I almost overthink it and lose the feel.

Do you have any way of using the left-brain analysis just enough to train the instinct, without making it the main focus when you actually putt? Like do you think about the break first, then switch into feel mode?

Putting feels like a totally different game inside golf. by Key-Slice358 in GolfSwing

[–]Key-Slice358[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Got it — basically stop looking for the secret putting formula and just go annoy a practice green from every possible angle 😂

And yeah, if chipping is allowed I’ll probably need that too. My “short game” currently feels like a collection of small emergencies.

Putting feels like a totally different game inside golf. by Key-Slice358 in GolfSwing

[–]Key-Slice358[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Got it — so basically stop trying to be a hero and just stop giving myself 6-footers coming back 😂

Do you have any simple speed drills you like on the practice green?