Thanks for the encouragement. TomB
I've stopped 7,478 spam messages. You can too! One month FREE spam protection at http://www.cloudmark.com/spamnetsig/? -----Original Message----- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Don M Sent: Thursday, October 06, 2005 6:36 PM To: [email protected] Subject: RE: ShopTalk: Natural Golf Tom Barnett wrote: > I have only been experimenting about a month, and I am very happy > with what I have seen so far. My shots are absolutely >straight. My driver, fairway clubs are perhaps just a little longer >than I was hitting them with the conventional swing and set up. My >iron shots are shorter than before I switched. The higher number >the club the more distance I have lost. I may be just a little >impatient but that was the reason for my question about club length. > > Thanks for your comments. They make me feel better > about where I am now. One additional question. Did you go to one > of their schools? I have my questions about the need. I am doing > so well from the book and the tapes, I question the need for an > expensive school. > Tom, I didn't go to a school. I took a regular lesson from one of their instructors. I was at a point where I was just guessing if I was doing it right or not, so I got a lesson. It was $75. A lot of guys say they lose distance at first but then get it back when they get more comfortable with their swing and are swinging more freely. I was able to learn a later release with NG, and that's when I actually gained distance. It is still a golf swing. It can go bad on you. ;) But I find it goes bad less often and is easier to figure out when it does. And you will go through the two steps forward one step backward thing for a while too, just like any swing change. Hang in there, it really is a simple effective golf swing. -Don M
