August 6th, 2010
If you are looking for the best possible way to maximize your swing power and get the best possible results, you need look no further than the best golf training aid. The best golf training aid will help you to properly adjust the way you stand and the way you swing as well as other things that sometimes, a teacher just cannot properly train you on! A good golf training aid will help you to see where you are falling short, why you are not holding the golf club right, why maybe you are struggling in various other ways.
With the right golf training aid, you will find that you are considerably more capable than you may originally think. You can get more impressive results than you may originally think, and of course, it can often go beyond normal expectations. With the right golf training aid, you will be able to possibly even double the length of your golf swing. With the right golf training aid, you will also be able to improve your put, which is a surprisingly big part of getting the right swings, getting those close calls, and even getting the occasional hole in one.
If you want to improve your golf game, yes you can spend money on golf lessons, and I would highly recommend that you do, at least in the beginning. But when you are ready to get past the basics, to polish up your game, and to otherwise get the results that you want, you should looking into getting a good golf training aid that will help you to improve and eliminate your overall imperfections.
August 30th, 2009
My family is from a different world, my parents were brought up in the 50′s and going to a doctor for anything other then being on your death bed was unheard of. Insurance was for the rich and you called your mother-in-law when someone was sick and you needed a home remedy. Many of the “old wives tales” came straight out of my grandmothers mouth, and to this day my mother still believes many of them.
Any ailment you have heard of my mom can tell you some crazy cure for it with caster oil or brandy. Once she told me the dog was digging holes and she had to make up some kind of concauction to pour in the yard which will keep him from digging. I could not tell you what it was she mixed up, but I know the grass all died and she never did it again. One tale I have always wondered were true is the aching bones theory.
Have you ever heard once you break a bone it aches right before it is going to rain? I did some research on several medical sites and found conflicting information. Several sites claiming the biometric system can cause aching in the joints, not necessarily bones, studies are unclear if the true cause of the ache is due to the pressure change or something all together different. I have found an informative site you should take a moment and glance through.
http://www.medicinenet.com/script/main/art.asp?articlekey=52133 .
Seems like all kinds of tales have been researched and as my grandma says the proof is in the pudding.
August 25th, 2009
I often wonder about the cause of arthritis in one area and not the other. Arthritis is known to be in joints which are used more frequently, I get that part, but why do you get pains in one knee and not the other? Through an online encyclopedia I went searching for the answers, and this is what I found:
Arthritis has over 100 different forms which can be caused in several different ways. Children under the age of 16 can be diagnosed with a form of arthritis called JIA. The cause in arthritis for juveniles is unknown, studies show that it maybe linked to heredity. A majority of arthritis types are degenerative, leaving older patients with minimal use of limb being effected. Like the link below several degrees of severity can be visible with the eye, other forms may need x-rays or MRI to measure the progression of the disease.
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/3a/Arthrite_rhumatoide.jpg/325px-Arthrite_rhumatoide.jpg
Beginning signs of arthritis are not as noticeable as one may think. Early morning stiffness in a joint or even locking of a knee after sitting to long can be the onset of arthritis. Reading this I have become worried with my right knee, after sitting cross legged for an undetermined amount of time, I start to feel pain and I have to pull the leg out straight with my hands as if I do not have control over it’s movements. I have had to do this ever since I was a teen. Should I be worried about one knee having pain over the other? I am going to see my doctor over this matter and keep you all informed.