Turning In Posture Training – pt2

Introductory Thoughts To Your Golf Posture
 
<Continued from this lesson>
 
Direction Steps:
  1. Go to your wall station
  2. Stand at attention with feet shoulder width apart AND firm like a wooden soldier.
  3. Left arm straight out from your breast bone with thumb up
  4. Reach right hand out and grab your left thumb
  5. Drop arms until your triceps rest on front curve of your ribs
  6. Keeping back and neck "straight" bend at your hip joints (do not lower your eyes or chin to help this bend at your hips. Try bending a little and various angles to about 45 degrees.)
  7. Bend at your knees until you feel muscles above your knee working to prevent you from falling (like getting ready to sit on a chair)
  8. Put hands on opposite shoulders in this golf posture
  9. Firm your body in your new postion
  • Go to a mirror (prefer full length or a reflection at a window)
  •  Repeat the direction steps above
  •  Study your golf posture – body, limbs, and head
  •  Stand sideways to the mirror
  •  Study your golf posture – body, limbs, and head (this is important)
  •  Stand with your other side to the mirror and study posture
Do not hesitate to take a minute at least once a day to study your golf posture at a mirror. This is how you will FEEL at each golf shot. This is how you will look if someone is helping you or teaching you. This puts you "in the know" of how you are setting your posture everytime you swing or practice swing at a golf ball.
 
A repeat of goals:
  • Learn to make 2 turns in control that are correct for the golf swing.
  • Learn to focus on the total sensation of movement through the 2 turns.
  • Learn 1 initial thought to trigger the turn away from the ball.
  • Learn some responses in your body as the result of your turn away in posture.
  • Learn how a controlled turn prepares you for a powerful turn back to the ball.
  • Learn the FEELING of where your body should finish in the takeaway turn in posture.
Why The Wall? I Already Learned How To Turn.
 
You MUST make a precise start to your takeaway turn in your golf posture. There are distractions coming which will cause you to make poor turns. Getting this correct in this lesson is only part of learning a great takeaway turn.
You WILL be practicing this move AT A WALL for as long as you play golf.
A Life Task Connection
 
Most of you will have used something to shovel snow or dirt out of hole or onto a wagon as examples. You use a posture to prevent back injury. You then do repeated turning motions scooping and throwing the dirt/snow sideways to where it is to go. Your basic movements involve turning in place. You can pretend to have a shovel and try these shoveling motions in your home.
 
Review Of 2 Critical Points Of Your Spine – Now In Golf Posture Training
 
There are 2 critical points along your spine which are vital to know. It is around them where so much of your golf swing occurs. Your golf swing is "made" or "lost" at these 2 points. However, what you do in other parts of your body will cause or affect correct or wrong movements at these 2 points.
 
It is important for you to know this early in your training because all that I teach you involves maintaining your best efforts to execute perfect movements at these 2 points. (More on this in coming posts.)
 
Take notice of the curvature of your spine.
 
(When you read or hear the instruction to "stand up straight" or "keep your back straight" this curved position you see in the mirror IS your "straight". You will learn how this curvature affects your golf swing efforts in a future post.)
 
Your last thought just before you start your takeaway move of a golf shot:
I now FEEL comfortable in my golf posture and I am ready to make 2 perfect turns.
Keep in mind that you can ruin your golf swing within the first inch of your takeaway movement. Making the first move precise will get your backswing off to a successful start.
A very important awareness of your spine shape is discussed in the next lesson. It may be controversial to you. Please read it for the benefit of others who may need to know.
<Continued with this lesson>

Turning In Posture Training – pt1

Review Of Body Awareness

<Continued from this lesson>
 
In this earlier lesson I had you do the following test.
 
Stand at attention with feet shoulder width apart AND firm like a wooden soldier.
  • Do you feel comfortable?
  • Do you feel in balance?
  • Do you have work stress to stand rigid for 5 seconds?
  • Do you feel ready to move abruptly or explosively with NO flailing body parts?
This step helps you become aware of an upper limit of being in maximum control of your body while still being able to do some movement in this strict and tight control. You will need to be aware of this for some golf swing decisions when playing.
 
There were other tests of being in sloppy posture to firm posture. (You may want to review that lesson on body awareness.)
 
Posture Test
  1. Stand at attention with feet shoulder width apart AND firm like a wooden soldier.
  2. Left arm straight out from your breast bone with thumb up
  3. Reach right hand out and grab your left thumb
  4. Drop arms until your triceps rest on front curve of your ribs
  5. Keeping back and neck "straight" bend at your hip joints (do not lower your eyes or chin to help this bend at your hips. Try bending a little and various angles to about 45 degrees.)
  6. Bend at your knees until you feel muscles above your knee working to prevent you from falling (like getting ready to sit on a chair)
  7. Firm your body in your new postion
Did you keep your body firm as you did the above steps?
Do you feel comfortable?
Do you feel in balance?
Do you have work stress to stand rigid for 5 seconds?
Do you feel ready to move abruptly or explosively with NO flailing body parts?
Do not remain in this posture for more than 5 seconds (approximately) each time you do this. Your back may not be strong enough for prolonged practice of this posture.
When standing you can observe, in a mirror, that almost all of your body mass is in front of your spine. Go to a mirror and get into the above posture position.
 
Three things to notice:
  1. Your body mass did not go anywhere – relative to your spine
  2. Your body mass will now feel like it is "hanging" slightly beneath your spine
  3. Your arms and hands are now farther forward of your spine
While in this golf posture practice putting your hands on your opposite shoulders – WITHOUT losing posture.
 
Seems easy enough. It can be hard to do and keep posture IF you are thinking of other things – like where is the flag, am I lined up correct, where's my grocery list?
The next few training lessons will have you placing your hands on opposite shoulders and you will be using THE WALL station to help you get the first 1 or 2 inches of this movement correct.
<Continued with this lesson>
 

Your Golf Posture Training – pt1

Posture Training And Club Selection
 
<Continued from this lesson>
 
In Standing Summary 3 (previous lesson), I mentioned in Step 5 you are to set your golf posture.
 
When you get into posture for golf you immediately move from a comfortable standing position. Some muscles have to work to maintain your new golf position. There is discomfort that you now have to get used to. You now have to develop a type of new comfort which you are to maintain as you generate movement in this posture.
 
You must also develop new sensations for various body parts. Just knowing your starting point for critical parts of your body prior to movement will help you to execute those movements more efficiently.
 
In 2004, I uploaded 4 lessons to help you learn to FEEL perfect posture. They progress from learning the steps without a golf club to finally learning to just feel your posture in a 1 or 2 second process during your golf shot routine.
 
There are photos and some brief video clips (which may no longer work). I was not able to update these web pages due to illness until recently. Those lessons are at the following link:
 
 
I hope to update this blog with photos once the text lessons are complete. This could include a newer version of Golf Posture Training.
 
Which Club Should You Use?
 
In the previous lesson, the summary listed the first direction of choosing your club. This step determines important factors of playing your golf shot.
  • You determine the distance where you want your golf ball to go
  • Previous practice and rounds played have helped you have a good idea how far you can hit your ball with each club
  • You select your club and move towards the tee or your ball on the fairway
  • You have just ELIMINATED, from your mind, one responsibility concerning your golf shot – DISTANCE
Your club of choice has solved on huge problem. How far do I have to hit the ball? How hard should I swing? Will my ball "get there"?
 
When you set up to the ball you are NOT to think any more thoughts about "how far". Your club in your hands answers that. (Unless a breeze starts and you have to start over with a different club.)
Your focus has been on distance. Your decision has been made by selecting a club. You now CHANGE YOUR FOCUS to the next step of your routine for playing your golf shot.
NOTE TO BEGINNERS: You initial games are NOT to hit the ball as far as an experienced golfer. You are there to learn many things about playing rounds of golf. Keeping a scorecard is NOT one of those things. Therefore, choose a club that you know will hit the ball short of any green or long hit down a fairway. This will help you learn how far your clubs will hit a ball in a game related round.
The above points regarding club choice were highlights for my beginners to golf. A great confidence builder just to know what to do on the golf course for this part of the process. I would tell them to gradually learn to play a hole as though the "par" was one more than the score card said. Many of them quickly were getting well played bogey within a very short time. Far better than the triple bogeys to bogey whatever; then give up on the game.
NOTE to those of you taking a girlfriend or someone new to golf for their first round of golf:
 
You hit your tee shot. Your friend hits their shot. If their shot has not gone 150 yards pick that ball up and take it 150 yards (or to your ball) and drop it there. You are not here to teach a newbie to "play each ball as it lies". I have seen embarrased people walk off the course never to come back. I have seen newbies worn out after 8 or more swings to get the ball to the green for the first 3 holes. If their 3rd putt is not in the hole pick it up and move on. Hardly anyone is interested in putting seriously after the 3rd try. Following these suggestions keeps the flow of traffic moving and is a more rewarding experience for the new golfer.
 
Review the posture lessons at the link I gave above and do so often. The learning curve will be slow for a few times as you practice in your yard or living room. But, very quickly, you will be able to know you are in good posture within seconds of starting a practice try.
 
<Continued with this lesson>

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