As far as I can tell the only thing worth looking at in most museums of art is all the schoolgirls on daytrips with the art departments.
Of the mental hazards, being scared is the worst. When you get scared, you get tense.
Forget your opponents; always play against par.
Of all the hazards, fear is the worst.
The mark of a great player is in his ability to come back. The great champions have all come back from defeat.
Grip the club as if you were holding a baby bird.
No matter what happens - never give up a hole. . . . In tossing in your cards after a bad beginning you also undermine your whole game, because to quit between tee and green is more habit-forming than drinking a highball before breakfast.
You have an internal critic, an internal drive that says, 'OK, you can do more. ' Maybe that's what keeps you going.
I had always been very rational, but I'd always used reason in such a way as to convince myself that reasoning alone would not solve anything, really. Reasoning is theoretical. Until you feel with your heart, you don't know if a thing is true. I found that book was absolutely authentic. I absolutely knew it was the truth. My whole heart accepted it.
It's not what happens to you, but how you react to it that matters.
All true knowledge contradicts common sense.