Showed up late, skipped the warm-up, and still found something to build on. If you’re a real-life golfer trying to improve between work meetings and french fries, this one’s for you.
📍 Course: Fellows Creek Golf Club | South Course
⛳️ 9-Hole League Round | May 12, 2025
How I Prepared for This Round
Not well. I rushed straight from work meetings that ran long, hadn’t eaten all day, and had to choose between food and warm-up. I stretched, which helped, but sacrificed putting and chipping time for a hot dog and fries. Fellows Creek doesn’t allow chipping onto the practice green, which foiled my original plan. The food gave me comfort, carbs, and enough time to mentally reset before walking to the first tee.
My Round Intention and Focus
Despite the chaos, my goal was to trust my short game routines, avoid spiraling after bad shots, and settle into a rhythm by mid-round. I reminded myself this was the start of the season, not the championship.
🔢 Key Stats
2 of 7
1
19
2 of 6
3 of 4
1
2
190 Yds
59
1:2
📝 Round Summary
This round was a lesson in contrast—between what I hoped to do and what actually happened, between nerves and progress, between showing up rushed and showing up anyway.
I arrived at the course frazzled and slightly hungry, having sprinted from a day of back-to-back meetings. My first league night of the season wasn’t exactly setting up to be a peak performance scenario. I hadn’t met my playing partners yet, and I was quietly worried about how I’d stack up or how I’d be perceived. Missing Week 1 due to illness already made me feel behind, and the four-putt I opened with didn’t help the confidence.
But as the round unfolded, so did something steadier. My short game started to show up. I made smart decisions in tough spots—especially when I found myself under a tree or staring down a risky second shot. I got a little more grounded after every hole, especially once I started trusting my pre-shot routines and tempo instead of rushing. My first green in regulation of the season felt like a mini turning point. Not a breakthrough, but a breadcrumb. A reminder.
It wasn’t a low-scoring round. It wasn’t clean. But it was exactly the kind of round that recreational golfers like me live in: a mix of awkward starts, small wins, mental corrections, and unexpected laughter. And that makes it valuable. Not because of the number at the end, but because of what it taught me while I was standing over it, swinging through it, and chipping out of it.
This was another round where I had to remind myself that I’m practicing for progress, but playing for laughs—and maybe a little strategy. My short game kept me in it. The fairways didn’t. But my mindset held steady, and that’s the win I needed for Week 1.
Mental Game Tags: Rushed, Self-conscious, Present, Tentative, Resetting, Smart, Embarrassed, Resilient, Disconnected, Composed
🥇 What Worked
- BLT chipping routine felt natural
- Didn’t chase mistakes—reset when needed
- Full swing pre-shot routine clicked mid-round
🛠️ What Needs Work
- Commit to tempo on long clubs
- Putting confidence inside 5 feet
- Second shot decision-making on par 5s
Off Fairway Moments

Ball bonanza: On one hole, all four of us lost track of our golf balls. We had a full-blown scavenger hunt between low spots, thick rough, and all of us playing Callaways. Bright-colored balls next time.

Snack diplomacy: I offered my fries to everyone on the first tee. All declined. By the 5th hole, Sharon broke—she took one after a duffed shot and said, “I’m taking a fry.”

Pond lesson: On a short par 3 over water, three of us tried to carry it. Three of us failed. The fourth laid up left and made bogey. Guess who smiled the widest?

Wrong fairway waltz: We relied on some old golfer excuse clichés to cope: “Just getting ready for the next hole,” and “I liked the last one so much, I came back.”
Mental Game Moments
• I felt awkward meeting my group after missing Week 1 due to illness and not knowing anyone’s background or playing style.
• I started the round with a sense of pressure to perform, especially after a four-putt on the first hole. I worried about what my partners thought of me.
• I calmed down by Hole 4 after seeing a few good shots connect, including my first GIR.
• On Hole 5, I rushed my decision and tempo—trying to do too much after a solid drive and paid for it with a penalty.
• I reminded myself by the back nine that nobody cared about my score as much as I did. That helped me focus on enjoying the round instead of performing.
🌾 Learned in the Rough
A few key takeaways from this round — the kind of lessons that tend to stick when they cost you a couple strokes first.
- When you skip a warm-up, the mental load shows up fast. I was tentative early and overly concerned with others’ perceptions.
- The BLT chipping routine worked even when confidence wavered. It gave me a starting point and helped salvage bogeys.
- Comfort food isn’t optimal fuel—but being fed is better than hangry panic swings.
🔁 Tweaks for the Week
This round gave me a few clear signals on what needs reps:
- Build a reliable pre-round snack + shake routine so I’m not choosing between hunger and preparation.
- Arrive earlier when possible to allow for putting and short game warm-up.
- Set pre-shot intentions with wedges and mid-irons—tempo suffered most on those shots