Foxholer
Blackballed
Greg, I think you are the proof that some people shouldn't go near competitions until they get a decent handle on the game. You seem to have taken the handicap thing and made a noose for yourself. You see it as a weight that is keeping you down from reaching your true potential.
If people want to improve their game then they should indeed cast the handicap aside and identify weaknesses in their game. Go and focus on those and leave trying to compile good scores for further down the line. When someone asks how you are getting on, tell them I am just practising.
I have posted on here before my belief that people starting out should start with an 18 handicap and should also stay well clear of medals. All medals do is beat new golfers around the head and give them humiliating scores in the treble figures. All this does is damage the new player and some people find it hard to control these pressures of trying to shoot better scores.
What I don't understand is that you claim to be a golf psychologist. Some people including myself questioned your ability to be a good golf psychologist if you hadn't even got a basic level of ability in golf. That is ultimately what the badge of handicaps. It gives golfers a general idea of your golfing potential. Anyway, I can look past that but your comments in the opening post is what worries me in in your claim to be a golf psychologist.
What kind of golf psychologist would hide away for 8 weeks with a 3 week injury because his scores were not improving, fearful that people were judging him, real or imagined. If you walk onto the first tee and tell someone your a golf psychologist, you can sure as hell bet this guy will be judging your round.
"I was trying to avoid making mistakes in comps in front of strangers''
Again another quote that tells me, you probably shouldn't be playing comps as its doing nothing but stunting your own development. Until you reach a level, you either no longer care what others think or you have enough confidence in your own ability to get the ball around the course, them stick 'to practise.
You seem to get a bit mind melted believing that this mastery this is the mind insulator and its long term goal is better than short target orientated methods of improvement. Maybe so, but surely the kaizen (Toyota) method of improvement would actually be small measurable improvements over time that build a large scale overall improvement.
All in all Greg, I think you would have been better off down at the practice ground for the last month rather than trying to find golfing solace in psychology books.
I agree with much, but not all, of this! The iterative improvement of the Kaizen approach is really how most sporting improvements are made even without a 'formal name'.