My mother
wasn’t much of a golfer. I, on the other hand, could get the ball up in
the air about half the time, and I seldom four-putted. While I was gearing
up for high school graduation, Dad loaded us in the Plymouth and the whole
family hit the links.
It happened
on a short hole, a three-par, a water hole. Just 80 yards or so to clear
the ball-eating duck pond that gaped between tee and flag. Then, walk the
little bridge, pitch it up on the green, two putts, and home with a bogey!
Aim high, that’s my philosophy.
Dad
cleared the pond, and probably landed softly in the middle of the green
like Tiger Woods on Ny-Quil. I think I was safe out of the water, as were
my brother and sister. Then Mom stepped up to hit.
Her
first ball bounced a few times before it hit the pond, while the second
was a hard line drive that startled the ducks with a big splash and set
them to flapping and skimming the ripples. Mom decided she’d take her penalty
and lay out another ball on the far side of the pond.
As Mom
and I sauntered down off the elevated tee, I unthinkingly blurted out the
limiting idea: “You’d never make it over that pond.” She stopped dead in
her tracks. A penetrating look I’ll never forget. An abrupt about-face,
then she marched back up the hill like a U.S. Marine ready to plant the
flag on Iwo Jima.
I knew
what she had in mind, and I knew she would succeed. Then . . . whack,
and the little white ball was airborne on a course for the other side.
She walked down and across the bridge, and continued the game as before.
Words were never spoken; none were ever needed.