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∎ Read Free How to Play Golf With Your Ears edition by Lowell Smith Religion Spirituality eBooks

How to Play Golf With Your Ears edition by Lowell Smith Religion Spirituality eBooks



Download As PDF : How to Play Golf With Your Ears edition by Lowell Smith Religion Spirituality eBooks

Download PDF How to Play Golf With Your Ears  edition by Lowell Smith Religion  Spirituality eBooks

Ever feel like quitting golf? (be honest)


In this highly entertaining book the author shares his personal mid-life golfing crisis. He chronicles the emotional frustrations and disappointments of losing his once proud skills. His determined campaign to become a born-again gamer will inspire golfers of all ages.
His quest for understanding and personal enlightenment leads him to the enduring insights of Shivas Irons, the legendary Scottish teaching pro from the Links of Burningbush, immortalized in author Michael Murphy's classic tale of

Golf in the Kingdom.


You will share the author's unexpected discovery of a unique technique for allowing your subconscious mind to control your golf swing.

EXCERPTS from How to Play Golf With Your Ears>
“sometimes I close my eyes to heer my pupils better. Ye might try it yourself sometimes, just listen’ to yer foursome as it ‘twere a piece o’ music”- Shivas Irons

“ The human mind, once stretched by a new idea, never goes back to its original dimensions.” -Oliver Wendell Holmes

A must-have book for anyone who delights in the mystery, spirit, and personal challenges of the compelling game of golf.


How to Play Golf With Your Ears edition by Lowell Smith Religion Spirituality eBooks

Sports psychology is often a ridiculed topic, but Lowell Smith's book proves its importance and effectiveness in redirecting one's life. Smith uses golf as his personal example for rediscovering the joys of life, but even non-golfers can use the sport as a metaphor and relate it to other areas of life.

The book is filled with funny quips and anecdotes that describes one man's nostalgic journey to re-discovering his love of golf. While not a golfer myself, I still loved this book because it encapsulates many non-golf related topics, such as Focused Listening and learning to establish a balanced lifestyle. Its main focus highlights the importance a new outlook on the small moments of daily life, and thinking about it from a multi-sensory approach.

You can tell that Smith did a lot of research for this book, and the quotes he chooses and scatters throughout the prose are so profound that I wrote many of them down to act as mantras and "words to live by". I am not entirely fascinated by Zen Buddhism, but I appreciate how it guides the reader to evaluate one's life and find new balances.

I give it 4 stars because there is a lack of original thought--Smith merely summarizes similar books on this topic. This is both good and bad, since it makes you want to read those books as well, but leaves the reader wanting to know more about Smith and less about his opinions on other books.

It is broken up into small sections and separated by headings, so it is a quick and easy read, one you can keep coming back to as you find time to read it.

Product details

  • File Size 1886 KB
  • Print Length 81 pages
  • Simultaneous Device Usage Unlimited
  • Publication Date May 31, 2012
  • Language English
  • ASIN B0087WZFKS

Read How to Play Golf With Your Ears  edition by Lowell Smith Religion  Spirituality eBooks

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How to Play Golf With Your Ears edition by Lowell Smith Religion Spirituality eBooks Reviews


I cannot say it was on par without a few sighs. I won't say it, but it really is. Practice makes perfect, but being out of practice makes getting back to perfect a bumpy road. Going from being really skilled at golf to being told his golf shots are comparable to a cross-eyed javelin throw, Smith takes you into his journey of self enlightenment. On the way, he shares some of what he's learned with the readers.
The most important lesson I took from this was, as you may have guessed from the title, listening is very important. You may want to know how listening would help you in Golf. Smith explains as you go along, and honestly, it seems as if you could apply this technique to other aspects of life. After reading this, Smith kind of makes golf seem like a martial art, in my opinion. He also illustrates how learning is so much more than technical details and science. It's a light read but worth it. Check this one out for lessons on life and some nice bits of wisdom that couldn't hurt to be a part of your life or your game on the course.
As a big golf fan, I had to buy this book once I'd spotted it. There's a very funny discussion of golf in Stephen Potter's book on gamesmanship, and I was hoping for a similar vein of satire. That is indeed what I found in this book, and my only complaint is that it's a tad on the short side.

The author is in his fifties, and trying to recover his ability as a golfer. He finds that his once sweet and confident swing has turned into a herky-jerky nightmare. Perhaps he is too old. However, he eventually succeeds, aided by his discovery of Zen Buddhism and the wise words of the golf expert Harvey Penick, so with tongue firmly in cheek the book explains his spiritual and sporting journey. In particular, the author explains how he learned to listen and feel before looking, in pursuit of the perfectly executed swing and strike of the golf ball--hence the title, "playing golf with your ears". I've tried out this technique on the golf course with mixed success so far, but I certainly enjoyed reading the book.
Golf is truly a game like no other in that it requires the unique balance and purity of mind to attain the desired result. Unlike most other sports that rely on raw strength and power in some form or other, success in golf is to be found from an entirely different quality; what author Lowell Smith identifies as zen.

Anybody who has ever played golf with some degree of success appreciates that it is a mentally taxing activity. I am no player if truth be told but when I was younger I dabbled with the game. On one of those rare occasions that found me hitting a little white ball on the gentle slopes of the school course I discovered to my surprise that I was actually enjoying myself. More surprising yet was the undeniable fact that I was doing rather well for a beginner. Anyway that day, as inevitably happens at some point in each of our lives, I arrived at a crossroads moment.

A crossroad moment is that point in your life when confronted with a dilemma, taking either one of two choices results in a radically different outcome. In this particular case my dilemma was an enormous Beech tree directly blocking my access to the green. My choices were limited. I could take the more conventional approach and go round the tree, but considering my skill level, that would have added at least three more strokes to my game. So I decided on the less conventional approach which was to aim for a shot above the tree. This was no mean feat being that the tree was at least 100 feet high and I was a scrawny 11-year old.

Cutting a long story short, by employing the considerable focusing powers of my RAS (Reticular Activating System) of the brain I was able to attain "zen" and hit the perfect shot. The ball sailed right above the tree and landed smack on the green three inches or so from the hole.

Author Lowell Smith has written an entertaining and insightful account of the myriad measures he undertook to retain his lost golf glory. Quoting several profound thoughts from golf greats and other renowned philosophers it is hard not to appreciate that there are life lessons to be learnt from this book beyond improving one's handicap.
Sports psychology is often a ridiculed topic, but Lowell Smith's book proves its importance and effectiveness in redirecting one's life. Smith uses golf as his personal example for rediscovering the joys of life, but even non-golfers can use the sport as a metaphor and relate it to other areas of life.

The book is filled with funny quips and anecdotes that describes one man's nostalgic journey to re-discovering his love of golf. While not a golfer myself, I still loved this book because it encapsulates many non-golf related topics, such as Focused Listening and learning to establish a balanced lifestyle. Its main focus highlights the importance a new outlook on the small moments of daily life, and thinking about it from a multi-sensory approach.

You can tell that Smith did a lot of research for this book, and the quotes he chooses and scatters throughout the prose are so profound that I wrote many of them down to act as mantras and "words to live by". I am not entirely fascinated by Zen Buddhism, but I appreciate how it guides the reader to evaluate one's life and find new balances.

I give it 4 stars because there is a lack of original thought--Smith merely summarizes similar books on this topic. This is both good and bad, since it makes you want to read those books as well, but leaves the reader wanting to know more about Smith and less about his opinions on other books.

It is broken up into small sections and separated by headings, so it is a quick and easy read, one you can keep coming back to as you find time to read it.
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