Colter Reed

Life Lessons from 84 Holes of Golf

84 rounds of golf in one day teaches life lessons on preparation, mindset, and more.

Image courtesy of ©Adobe Stock/Nischaporn

Most people play 18 holes of golf and call it a day. Thirty-six if you’re trying to play all four courses at Bandon Dunes in a weekend.

But once a year, that isn’t enough. What if you could take a good thing and literally spend all day doing it? Tee off at first light, play all day, and don’t quit until they turn the sprinklers on. (We’ve even used glow-in-the-dark balls to get two more holes in.)

Golf is a serene walk in the park with friends with plenty of time to think—about your last shot, about your next shot, and about life. When you play 84 holes, you have a lot of time to think.

Here are some life lessons I recorded in a journal entry after playing golf from dawn to dusk.

Anything worth doing is worth doing poorly at first. Stick with it. Your first tee shot of the day isn’t going to be your best. It won’t be your worst, either.

You’re going to meet others who wish they could do what you’re doing. The only difference between you and them is that you decided to do it.

Question: What lessons do you see in your everyday life? Share your thoughts in the comments, on Twitter, LinkedIn, or Facebook.

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