Dr. David Wright teaches in parables. He quotes Tolstoy. He writes books with titles like Mind Under Par. He’s a seasoned golf guru, and over three decades of golf instruction he’s distilled his teaching technique into a method that converts the biomechanically complex, the mentally mystifying, and the psychophysiologically stunning into pithy, digestible expressions. He’s got golf proverbs.
“You cannot play and think at the same time”, Dr. Wright says. And: “Get back into the moment, because that’s where your greatest performance resides.”
It’s simple, and it works. Dr. Wright’s spent the better part of his life studying golf psychology, laboring away in the biomechanics labs, tweaking swings on the range to learn a bit about both the mind and body of golfers. From what he’s learned, he believes in allowing your body to use its natural proclivities (your “swing signature”) while doing a few mental push ups on the side (like backwards visualization). We asked him what general golf advice would help people shoot lower, without computerized swing analysis and practice with those weird weighted sticks. We wanted something that focuses on the part of the game played between the temples. He jumped right in.
Do What Feels Natural

“In one of my graduate courses on sensation perception, we had to sign our name. My professor said, ‘I want everybody to sign their name, and then, under the signature, I want you to copy the same signature. Don’t sign it. Copy it. Look back and forth. Make sure every horizontal and vertical line and every elliptical symbol looks exactly like it does in your name.’ By the time you get to the third letter”, Dr. Wright says, “you realize you got a major degradation in performance.”
In golf, it’s the same concept. “You can’t think and do what should be automatic”, Dr. Wright says. “What I would encourage is that players do what’s natural.” He says people spend too much time trying to copy the idea of the perfect swing. “What happens over time is that they try to make a swing — copy a signature. They don’t have anything that’s automatic. The game gets very frustrating.”
“If you go to a PGA teacher’s meeting, you can actually hear yelling and screaming arguments about, ‘No, that’s not how you swing a golf club.’ Well, there’s so many different ways to swing a club”, Dr. Wright counters. “Players should work to go more to what feels natural.”