| Home | Forum | Tips | Gallery | Blog | Reviews | Lessons | Gym | Staff | Podcast |
| Register | FAQ | Links | Events | Arcade | Mark Forums Read |
| Our golf forum has 72,584 discussions | 35,138 members | 19 online now | Goossykeemn has just joined the GTO golf forum |
| ||||||||
| Welcome to golftuitiononline.com | the global golf forum You are currently viewing our golf forum as a guest which gives you limited access to the many features available here at the GTO golf forum. We are one of the largest golf forums online with 35,138 members worlwide and we pride ourselves on being the friendliest golf forum online. JOIN NOW (It's FREE) and you will gain immediate access to all these great features:
|
Register Now for FREE! |
![]() |
| | LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
| |||
| Do You Want To Make Perfect Putts? Hello, I am IMMSHARMA.I am the author of 'Sure Shot Aiming System'.Out of academic interest I did research about the 'mental process' involved in AIMING. My research could yield a surprising result.Aiming is purely a mental process involving a simple routine which is the actual CAUSE and CURE of a miss.A simple geometric routine ...a kind of visualization technique (backed by a sci.fic proof). This 'routine' ,when imagined mentally...in a way 'clicked' mentally, just before hitting the ball makes the ball take the intended line and thus we can make a perfect putt irrespective of speed and distance. It does work as it is a scientific fact. All that what is to be done is to just visualize the 'routine' and hit.The rest follows automatically. It can get rid of your inconsistency in making putts. With this you can be at ease with your stroke and thus even other problems can be get rid of too. Even it can relieve you from the burden of lots of practice . It also gives you a simple technique to get the accurate line so that your alignment becomes easy. I have prepared an easy to understand description of the technique along with the necessary diagrams. For further details you can contact me at immsharma@yahoo.com with your putting problems. Thanks,IMMSHARMA. |
| |||
| Quote:
We usually attribute our 'miss' or the 'incapacity' to make a perfect,consistent putt to the so called elements like wrong angle,lack of concentration ,improper stance or grip etc... and finally our bad luck. But my research esablishes that a certain.... specific' geometric routine completion' is ,apart from the line of aim,the most essential part of aiming.Without this 'routine' the ball CAN NOT take the intended line and results in a miss . It is quite a novel concept and an aiming system with a difference. It is a 'fruit' of many years of my committed research. It is purely a sci.fic (geometric) concept . It is the only system which can give you a concrete idea about aiming by addressing the very 'mental process' invoved in aiming. It throws light on the real knowoledge of what and where actually we are mistaking when we miss a putt. In other words we come to know the actual 'mental process' involved in shot making. It reveals the very ' mental craft' involved in making a perfect putt. It enables us to come out of the 'shell' with all our present misconceptions about 'aiming' and helps to know what the 'REAL KEY ' of concentration in the game' is. After you learn this 'geometric routine' you are sure to realize the 'REAL THING'(purely geometric and a thing of 'visualisation') involved in the stroke execution,apart from contact point and the'aim line'etc. The routine is a simple(but effective) ..... a kind of geometric figure formation or visualization technique. Send an e- mail at: immsharma@yahoo.com for further details. Thanks,IMMSHARMA. |
| |||
| My reaserch confirms that just the line of aim is not enough...and that a specific geometric routine ( the unknown additional component of aiming)is necessary to be completed(mentally)at each and every sroke we make without which the ball gets deviated. This (mental completion of the routine) is what our mind does while in the state of concentration..and hence concentration means nothing but the mental completion of the routine. |