
Because the Swing Thoughts Needed Somewhere to Go
I didn’t set out to start a golf blog. I just wanted to get better.
After a long break from the game, I came back swinging—literally and figuratively. But somewhere between the YouTube tips, the algorithm-approved swing tweaks, and the well-meaning friends offering advice I didn’t ask for, I realized I wasn’t just trying to improve my game—I was trying to make sense of it.
And when I sat down to take notes on a round one day, something clicked: I wasn’t just jotting stats or scribbling reminders—I was writing a story. A narrative. A full-on post, just for myself. Because that’s how my brain works. Writing is how I learn, how I reflect, how I process. I’ve always been that way—journalism, tutoring, creative essays, overanalyzing things for sport.
So I figured… maybe this wasn’t just for me. Maybe someone else out there is also trying to get better at golf without getting buried under swing thoughts and self-doubt.
And Playing Through was born.
Quieting the Noise, Moving the Needle
I’m a recreational golfer with a spreadsheet. That should tell you a lot.
I love to learn. But I’ve learned the hard way that loving information doesn’t mean all information is helpful. Especially not when it’s coming at you in a nonstop stream of “fix your swing in 3 minutes” videos. I chased a few too many of those. Some worked. Most didn’t.
Eventually, I went full Hermione Granger about it—books, lesson notes, structured practice plans. I needed a system. Something that would help me make intentional progress, not just collect ideas. Because while golf improvement content is everywhere, so little of it is filtered through the lens of:
- What kind of golfer is this for?
- What stage are they in?
- What’s the actual goal?
That’s what I wanted to create: a place where a smart, curious, slightly overcaffeinated golfer could say, “Okay, but what’s my next step?”
What Progress Looks Like (For Me)
Yes, I want to lower my scores. No, that’s not the only reason I play.
Progress, for me, is more about feeling confident—knowing my clubs, trusting my setup, sticking to my pre-shot routine, and recovering from the occasional implosion with a little more grace and a lot less grip tension.
I want more rounds where I walk off the 18th green feeling like I learned something—and fewer rounds where I spend four holes spiraling after a topped hybrid and a bad bounce.
That’s what I’m chasing. Not perfection. Just forward movement. Fewer flubs, more fun. Better habits. Smarter practice. And the occasional brilliant par that keeps you coming back.
Who This Blog Is For
At first, it was just for me. Then for a few friends asking for recommendations.
Now, I’m thinking about all the golfers who feel like they’re stuck between beginner and expert, trying to get better with limited time, limited trust in the internet, and unlimited golf balls to lose.
This blog is especially for the golfers who might not see themselves in the mainstream golf content—who want strategy and structure without the snobbery. I’ve spent a lot of time thinking about what makes golf accessible, what makes it intimidating, and how we can create a better conversation around improvement.
Because improvement shouldn’t be gatekept.
Why I Keep Showing Up
I play golf because I love it. I love walking the course. I love the smell of fresh-cut grass (even if I’m allergic to it). I love the rhythm of the game, the geese that don’t fear death, the absurdity of hitting a tiny ball across acres of land and calling it recreation.
But more than that—I love having a project. I love checking progress. I love building systems and testing them.
Golf gives me all of that. It uses the same parts of my brain I use for work—strategy, communication, feedback loops—but in a way that’s completely mine. It’s creative. It’s analytical. It’s humbling. It’s funny.
And it’s never, ever done.

A Final Word for Fellow Work-in-Progress Golfers
Here’s what I want you to know:
Self-improvement in any area of life means setting a goal and taking steps toward it—even if you don’t know if you’ll ever fully “arrive.” And yes, it’s okay to admit that you want lower scores. You’re not shallow. You’re just honest.
This blog is one way I’m pushing back on the voice in my head that says, “No one cares what you have to say.” Because I know that voice is lying. And I think you know the one in your head is, too.
So if you’re out there working on your swing, second-guessing your 7-iron, or wondering if anyone else chunked a chip and laughed anyway— You’re in the right place.