You Didn’t Want It Bad Enough, You Loser

Watch out for these.

As a teenager playing golf, I had to cope with my emotional immaturity to improve.

If I failed to win a tournament, I believed it was because I didn’t want it bad enough.

It is as if the universe measures out Desire, selects who has the most, and metes out rewards accordingly.

Sounds plausible, right?

Like bumper sticker wisdom.

I really believed my Desire wasn’t strong enough to motivate me to excellence.

I conceived reality that way, meditated on my Want, built really painful attachments, and suffered like mad.

Crazy!

When I didn’t win a tournament, it ballooned into a devastating emotional catastrophe. God graded me, and I came up short.

I was the embodiment of failure. Total and complete.

Ouch!

I still feel those scars.

The inflated Desire grew so powerful, I cheated — as if I suddenly lost the cognitive ability to count to 7. Desire casts a powerful spell.

I cheated against friends. People close to me. Great friend, right?

Better as my enemy.

One Selfish Ass Poisons Four Beautiful Dreams

Look what Desire made me do.

I cheated at least two or three shots, improving lies, and selectively remembering strokes played at a high school sectional qualifying tournament.

My score was one of four over two days. 647 strokes later, the scores between my school and a rival school came to a single shot.

We went to the State finals thanks to my cheating.

I sent four real golfers packing for home while I stole their opportunity.

I regret that.

It isn’t virtue.

Maximizing emotional desire is not a good idea. There are better ways to motivate yourself to excellence.

Personal satisfaction is high on the list.


~~wink~~

Anatta