We played golf again today and they paired us up with a younger couple (maybe 30 or so). He played, she was along for the ride. She said golf was too hard. Julie and I were compelled to prove her wrong.
We talked a lot during the round, mostly with her. Her only exposure to golf was watching her boyfriend. But she did say it was it was interesting to watch women play but she could never hit the ball like we do. Now, we're not talking shot lengths like men can do. We're talking drives of 200+ yards with a few 30-40 yards past that. Julie let her know our occasional long drive wasn't the norm and we (unfortunately) proved that more than we wanted. Today was nothing like our last round. We stunk off the tee. But we scored well. (Julie 94, me 88)
At one point Julie asked her if she was a runner. This was because we saw her run between her boyfriend's shots, rarely riding the cart with him. She said she used to run a lot but she just got into kickboxing. Julie's eyes lit up.
When three of us ended up in the sand trap and only one got out I told her, "This shows you the most important part of golf is from 100 yards in." She was finishing my sentence as I ended it. She was no dummy.
As the round went on she seemed to be more and more interested in taking up golf. Early in the round she said this was the time she and her boyfriend could bond. As we walked off the 18th green she looked at us and said, "I think I may give this a try." Her boyfriend smiled. Then she said, "next time we'll all play together."
I never thought there would come a time like this. That I could be me, out there in "normal world" doing the things I love and the people I interact with see me as I've always seen myself. Pretty cool.
I remember hearing something a long time ago. I don't remember who said it but it was an analogy about golf and life. It was something like golf will expose the real you, or something like that. What it has done for me is get me active again and allow me to interact with society in places other than bars and restaurants and grocery stores.
I guess that's priceless.
Julie
BTW: There was no sign the couple playing with us knew about our past or if they did they just didn't they just didn't care. If I had my choice I'd take the latter.