Learning from Legos
- Follow professional directions. They don’t include an instruction manual for nothing! Following the specified order of construction will ensure a strong foundation for your toy. If you try to wing it and get creative, your final result might be fun to play with at first but it will probably fall apart over time. Sound like golf? Learn the basics first and correctly, not just from what a buddy tells you. Also, learn to master short game and short swing skills before expecting to master a perfect full swing.
- Every piece counts. To complete a Lego set, every piece is used and builds on each other. So don’t forget any piece! Similarly in golf, all the pieces to a well rounded game have to be in place for a golfer to reach their potential and shoot a very good score.
- One piece at a time. You can’t rush the build and half the fun of getting a Lego set is building it! Large sets can be very overwhelming too and require patience. So for all of those reasons in golf, take your game and each round you play one shot at a time, be patient when expecting results and enjoy the process of building and improving your game. Then, when the work is done, you can enjoy the play time even more!
- Pay attention to detail. A building block laid down in the right place but with the wrong orientation can mess up the whole architectural plan. In golf for example we can set our grip or our stance in the right place but if we are aimed sideways or our grip is a bit strong, we might not get the best results.
- You’ve got to work with what you have. Each Lego set comes with a set number and styles of pieces, so you can’t try and build a space ship when the set only has pieces to build a motorcycle. In golf we need to realize that we have to build our swing around our strengths and weaknesses and what we are physically capable of. Most of us are not built to make a Rory McIlroy swing.
- Don’t forget the maintenance & don’t throw out the instruction manual. Even well built Lego sets can fall apart after a lot of wear and tear and hard play time. Make sure you take the time to secure the connections and make sure you have all the pieces. If it does fall apart unexpectedly or after an accident, no problem, get out the instruction manual and revisit the basic directions. In golf, we can’t ignore the need for regular practice and make it a point to schedule a checkup with your local professional when things are going good as well as bad; this should be normal maintenance for the avid golfer (that most of us don’t do). If your body changes over time or with injury, we can revisit our fundamentals and rebuild our swing as needed (with workable modifications).
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