Backspin Volume 3, Issue 1 | Page 9

editor’s letter Golf is slowing down a bit for the winter, but our love for the game is alive and well. I played my first nine holes! Well, sorta. I went out with my golf pro husband and son Shayne. They wouldn’t allow me to hit shots when we were going to slow people down behind us (thanks, guys) or drop after I hit it out of bounds, or in the woods, or in the water ... So I found lots of places on Carter Plantation’s front nine that many of you don’t know even exists. It’s a beautiful course. I saw it from several different angles, many of which course developers very much did not intend I see. It was so much fun though. Even though I’m pretty terrible right now, I did make two honest-to-goodness double bogeys. I’m very proud. It reminded me of a sweet story from when Shayne was little. Jake used to take him out on the course and allow him to hit a few balls on the course. Jake was playing with Daryl Fontenot, who hit a ball he wasn’t really happy with. “At least it’s in,” Daryl said, relieved the ball didn’t go out of bounds. Through four-year-old humor, Shayne said, “Yeah, in the woods.” Daryl still tells that story, and I think about it nearly every time I hit the ball. If I had any advice for folks just starting to play, learn to laugh at yourself. You’re going to need to do it a lot. Golf is hard if you pick it up later in life, but it does make you feel like a child again. Not because of inexperience, but appreciation. Everyone around me is hammering the ball into the fairway, particularly since I hang around with folks who play all the time – Jake, his golf team, Shayne, Jake’s golf buddies and people I interview for Backspin. Everyone around me takes for granted that they can just rare back and hit the ball a mile. Every once in a while, mine does that too. Now, I’m not going to even try to say I hit the ball like the guys on Jake’s team. Please. While they are very encouraging (way more so than my husband and son), ^H