Is Golf A Useful Form Of Exercise?
We all realize that we ought to take more exercise. Some individuals even like doing it, but regrettably for
society and most of us in it, the majority of people cannot be bothered to get off their backsides, which is why
the populations of Western countries are turning to lard before our very eyes.
Is Golf A Useful Form Of Exercise?
This is a shame not only for the people involved but for the tax-payers who have to refill the public coffers in
order to take care of them when they get sick.
So, how can we induce ourselves to take more exercise? Clearly government health warnings are only benefiting
advertising agencies and the media, so what else?
Maybe, they should tell us: 'Play tennis once a week, you will enjoy that vodka a whole lot more afterwards!'.
Or 'Play a round of golf first and that G&T will taste better!' Or: 'Walk a mile to the pub, have a pint, walk
back and have another one, you will need it!' The puritanical way certainly has not worked, so why not give realism
a try?
I mentioned golf there quite by accident, but it seems to me that going for a game of golf and having a drink
with your friends later is a whole lot better than watching it on TV with a can. It is not only the walking either,
which most of us do not do enough of anyway, but it is the actions connected with hitting the ball - the swing and
hand-eye co-ordination too.
And the social life afterwards, and loads of people miss out on a social life especially after retirement or the
death of a spouse.
Now golf may not seem to you to be an interesting sport and I understand that point of view whole-heartedly, but
that is because it is not until you realize how difficult it is to hit that ball hundreds of yards onto the green
that most people can understand the difficulty of playing the game well. That may be true of the majority of sports, but golf does look so
unhurried, does it not?
One of the good things about golf is that you can play with golfers of similar ability to yourself so that you
do not feel embarrassed or 'out of place'. If you join a ramblers' club after 30 years of watching TV, you will
soon feel old and past it, but golf is different, because there is no pace, no hurry, you can take as long as you
like, you can let others 'play through' (go on before you) and you can call it a day and retire to the club house
whenever you want.
Lots of retired people take up golf, particularly if they were used to being active at work, but it is also a
hobby, that you can take up if you think that you are not active enough at any age. It is surprising how much a
little bit of extra exertion can help stave off stiff limbs and chubbiness.
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