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Introduction
Preface

01. Begin To Improve
02. Past Experiences
03. Practice
04. Overcome Inertia
05. Time and Place
06. Emotional Drive
07. Kill Interest
08. Stimulate Interest
09. Self-Competition
10. Maintain Interest
11. Avoid Habits
12. Keep Records
13. Use Golf Records
14. Accuracy
15. "Golf Bugs"
16. Adjustments
17. Golf Lessons Fail
18. Idiosyncracies
19. Faith Work
20. No Transfer
21. Remember
22. Trial and Error
23. Speed Learning
24. Remedial Golf
25. Practice Strengths
26. Not Make Perfect
27. Errors of Form
28. Psychological Errors
29. Slump
30. Gain Confidence
31. Handle Anger
32. Golfing Masochism
33. Harness Compulsions
34. Golf Thinking
35. Particulars
36. Golfing Delusions
37. Gambling Shot
38. Most Missed
39. Computing Distance
40. Save Strokes
41. To Think
42. Pressure
43. Apply the Pressure
44. Rationalize Failure
45. Be Realistic
46. Confidence in Putting
47. Direction in Putting
48. Carpet Putting
49. Putting Stance
50. Finesse Putting
51. Putting Slumps
52. Longer Drives
53. Final Secret

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22. Understanding 'Trial and Error"

There are certain broad principles of golf which are useful in the rapid development of a sound swing. Such principles have been ably expounded by Bobby Jones, Tommy Armour, Percy Boomer, Ben Hogan and others. I once witnessed how quickly they can be taught. Beginning with a 34-year-old woman who had never swung a club, Harvey Penick set up for her a mechanical pattern which in thirty minutes produced a very good-looking golf swing resulting in many good shots. She began to play almost daily and in three months shot a 39 for nine holes from men's tees.

However, the fine tuning of golf can take a lifetime and is mostly trial and error.

Thorndike and others discovered that cats, dogs, chicks, monkeys and other animals, when attacking a new problem, first tried a number of hit and miss solutions. Those things which failed they gradually abandoned. Those which led to success were "stamped in" and retained. What this emphasized was that a successful performance is not necessarily the result of conscious thought, but is rather caused by associations produced by subconscious mechanisms of the body. It is signif­icant that when Snead was asked how he did it, he said that he really did not know. Hogan, on the other hand, has been credited with being able to take his swing apart and put it back together again. This is to some extent true on a broad scale, but how each muscle learns its duties no one knows specifically.

We must assume that this trial and error process is gone through by an infinite number of our bodily mechanisms and hence can only come about by much previous trial and error. Gross skills come first, then skills within the correct gross skills, and then skills within these skills, until we come to the fine tun­ing required for a long side hill putt, breaking to the right on a fast green.

Trial and error learning is most important in learning the short game. So much attention has been focussed on proper form in full shots that we tend to forget the extreme importance of being able to hit the ball varying distances in approaches, trap shots, chips and putts. The inability to gauge these dis­tances accounts for the loss of most of our strokes. In this de­partment of golf form seems relatively unimportant, and trial and error learning all-important. Hogan's recent difficulties around the greens has hardly come about because of any deterioration in gross form. There has simply been some mus­cular forgetting where distance is concerned, and considerable trial and error relearning is the remedy.

The three necessary elements, then for efficient learning in golf are the mechanical fundamentals, the application of psy­chology, and considerable trial and error learning. The latter requires time.

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