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Hi Shawn. Thanks for your very informative videos. I love the task method of teaching the swing. I find trying to think of hammering a nail into wood/door frame makes me focus on the ball too much rather than the target while “ cutting the dandelion stem/tee grass and send clippings to the target” I interpret as a slightly different task in my head. Is the intent to use both of these or either one depending upon what you brain thinks is a better task to fit the job? Also I note when you hammer the nail with the actual hammer your trail hand is way under (super strong) compared to where you normally have it when you actually swing the golf club. Is this just for demo purposes or do you suggest we put the trail hand with the palm almost facing outward at setup.
Cyrus! Great to meet you and awesome questions!
hammer is steel to steel, the golf ball is an ELASTIC COLLISION, it stays on the face for a couple mm then separates from the face into the picture, like collecting the ball from where it lies and releasing it into the direction of flight. So as the ball stays on the face, the club face is rotating. So there is such a thing as too strong and many get there and have to come back into a more balanced state to merge with their own anatomy. And as for task, yes, use one that allows you to feel you have access into the direction of flight beyond the intermediate point. For me, I use the dandelion stem on all short game less than full swing (20-40-60 yard shots) and for full iron, hybrid and fairway wood shots, I use the eyes on grass 1/4 inch ahead of the ball and use momentum to whip those into the picture with breazyness and driver is flicking tees into summersaults over the intermediate point with momentum. Keep at it!! 👍🔥💪
I’ve found that putting my eyes on the intermediate point once I’ve confirmed the setup keeps me from defaulting to hit at the ball. I feel it helps me with my task of throwing the club. Dandelions and door frames seem to get me in trouble and fixated on the ball.
Very good! We just posted a video last week that reflects this! Task 2.0 send grass clippings to target video!