Sarah Palin’s Vanity Handicap – and I take my stand.

“Oh, I’m a ten handicap.”

Every once in a while, I will play with someone declares they are a 9 to 12 handicap. This is a suspicious number for me, as too often than not, it is a vanity handicap for a bogey golfer (or worse) who deludes himself with low scores. With one individual, I saw him take a double bogey and declare it a par – “it would have been a par, and I can’t take that six because I don’t sandbag.” Which was meant “I don’t sandbag like you.” I had driven him to distraction because I opened with a birdie on his course, and then proceeded to par the next four holes. It was an extraordinary stretch consisting of 190 yard shots landing and skidding to a halt ten feet from the hole, a sand blast to inches, drives that carved the fairways, and putts -really long putts, that dropped. I was carrying a 17 handicap at that time, and it was easily the best stretch of golf I had played up to that point. After he said that, my zone of invulnerability popped as I wanted to wrap my golf club around his neck. He settled into a comfortable pattern of 200 yard drives, 130 yard 7 irons, and fussy chips and drawn out 2 putt bogeys and occasional pars, carding a 92. I ended up with 95 and I posted my score. He didn’t because, he declared again that he was no sandbagger. 

I keep reading Sarah Palin’s press releases and the bile rises and it’s that vanity handicap all over. She claims to be a budget cutter, but bills Alaskan for 300 days worked from home, 600 miles from the capital. She claims credit for an unbuilt pipeline. She claims to be a Republican (Party of Lincoln, liberty, competence, efficiency, and brilliance) but tried to censor books, crushed people who got in her way, and put cronies in positions of power -actually, I guess she is what passes for a Republican these days. She claims to be an American, but gave support to Alaskan separatists. 

She brays about playing scratch when she really is a bogey golfer who plays with mulligans on every hole, rolled balls on the fairway, and 5 foot gimme’s. 

The vanity handicap is that most awful of lies. Sandbaggers lie to others with awareness of their lies. People with vanity handicaps lie to themselves and are incapable of seeing through their delusion. When confronted, they wrap themselves up in self righteousness.

I believe that Mrs. Palin believes she is incapable of lying, believes everything she says is true, and has neither insight nor empathy. She is an empty vessel for broadcasting hacked speeches for Rove. John McCain, whom I once greatly admired, has betrayed us all by putting her on his ticket. The speech above is like a Seinfeld episode, a show about nothing, that appalls just the same. 

God Bless America!

On Par by Bill Pennington – I don’t think he read the header…

I am an avid NY Times reader, and look forward to the dispatches from Bill Pennington. I emailed him this blog several weeks ago, but I don’t think he gets it.

from B. Penninton

Thanks for your email from last month. Sorry for the delay in answering. I agree, golf is certainly a metaphor for life. Except that some people keep score, I guess. Anyway, thanks again for your message and I hope you keep reading my On Par golf features and watching the videos at nytimes.com when they resume next spring.


Bill Pennington

Shotgun

 

Three targets, three scatter-grams

Three targets, three scatter-grams

The picture on left shows three pin targets for pitches, easily the most important part of the game to transition to hitting in the eighties. I tend to use my 60 degree wedge for these and feel a bit lost without it, even though this means I have to give up something long like a 3 wood (because I also carry a gap -52 degree- wedge). The pitching is serviceable, but not brilliant. Must keep head down.

Golf Lessons from the Operating Room

When I teach residents and medical students, I tell them a surgeon has to practice his skills. I tell them to play video games and develop hand eye coordination, to tie knots with the left and right hands. The knowledge base, the decision making skills, the patient relationship skills are all separate from the actual physical skills of surgery. I tell them, when I ask you to sew, I expect you to sew as if you are a savant -unknowing and unrelating, but technically brilliant and relentless. They should operate scratch. I have known many surgical residents who were walking textbooks of surgery, veritable walkers of water when it came to patient interaction, and superb diagnosticians with CT scanning eyes, ultrasound fingers and ears, but these same brilliant people couldn’t cut their way out of a paper bag

 

Golf is basically the same. You have a situation (ball low, high, uphill, downhill, fairway, rough, trap, wind, etc..) that requires a strategic decision to reach an identified goal. The second part (like actually operating) is in the execution -setting up and swinging. This second half has to be pure and unthinking, repetitive and free of emotions and thoughts that may bleed in from the first part -the situation, the strategy, the goal, the eventual score. I was thinking the exact thing in the OR yesterday when I asked my resident to just operate brilliantly (he made me proud), and today, my good friend, J. J. told me the exact same thing about my golf! 

It is to disconnect the act from the mind, to achieve a purely detached but present state of being in swinging the club. 

Thankfully, I am a scratch surgeon. I hope to be a scratch golfer. (BTW, the hand in the picture belongs to a resident who happens to be a scratch golfer).

Post from the West Coast on LPGA’s English Only Policy

 

Life is so good in America!

Life is so good in America!

Mike,

 

I am at present quite disappointed with the LPGA. While a part of me
senses the awkwardness surrounding the communication efforts of that
large group of Korean golfers on the LPGA, sports has often been at the
forefront of meritocracy–breaking racial and gender barriers to
recognize superlative achievement and entertainment potential. This is
obviously a step in the wrong direction, with an attempt to make the
LPGA a more attractive product to sponsors by trying to have the tour
players look the way that management thinks would be most appealing. The
irony of course is that the fastest growing segments of players, viewers
and sponsors are all Asian, and the LPGA needs this infusion more than
the other way around. The Korean players will likely ace their English
tests (Koreans and test taking?), and the LPGA will be fresh out of
excuses, but the ugliness will be out there. I’m proud of the
graciousness with which many of the players of Korean descent have
handled inquiries concerning their views on this matter, but I’m
sickened by the whole thing.

Hope all’s well with you and yours. We should get a crew together and
head to Scotland or some other golfing destination.

Sam

The Seven Pillars of Golf Wisdom

 

Playing golf has:
1. made me a better golfer (practice, golf improvement)
2. allowed me to incorporate golf in all aspects of my life (golf course management applied to life)
3. compelled me to spread the word about golf (golf fellowship)
4. allowed better understanding of my strengths and weaknesses as a golfer (golf self-awareness)
5. given me perspective to view and interpret the events of the world through the USGA Rules of Golf (vision, golf rules etiquette and rules applied)
6. identify and investigate the cardinal mysteries of golf (golf mystery)
7. given me hope that I can be a more perfect golfer (golf faith)

Labor Day Swing 2008

This is a video of my golf swing circa 2008. I have never videotaped my swing before but it was shocking to see so much head movement. I am now swinging in front of the bathroom mirror to try to fix this. Even so, somehow, I was making square contact, but as you see on swing #2, it is very easy to “chunk” the ball. Technology and being square on address keeps the ball moving forward in the general direction you want it to go, but not as good as swing #1.

Cover people

Attached is a link to a Youtube video showing Arnel Pineda. He is a Filipino singer who can channel Steve Perry of the band Journey. The video is of Arnel, NOT Steve Perry. The story is that Journey, in need of a lead singer, happened upon Arnel on Youtube and has now hired him as the lead vocalist. Which leads to the strange situation of Journey now being the best Journey cover band. But this is no isolated incident.

All bands eventually end up covering their own songs, carrying themselves on their earlier success. This happens to people as well, as I see people whose greatest moments had happened in high school, college, or ten years ago, but not now. They are cover people, basically doing an adequate job mimicking themselves when they were at their best. Golfism rejects this in that it is very important to stay in the NOW, and to create and play golf for the shot at hand and not for future or past glory.

Making a Tiger

Pictured here is my son, G, who just had his cast removed last week -he fell off the monkey bars and broke his right radius and ulna (both forearm bones). He has finally loosened up to where he wants to play golf again. It makes me wonder if it is possible to create a Tiger or if Tiger was just born that way. G likes to hit the ball, but mostly, he likes to be with me, and that’s great. I don’t interfere with his swing right now because he’s recovering from an injury, but it is fantastic to see him whack a ball straight and long every once in a while. I hope he ultimately decides to take up golf for himself, and not just to see his old man smile.