Ethan loved peaceful Sunday mornings on the golf course, where “the sunlight, the quiet, the steady rhythm of the game” always helped him relax. But during a friendly tournament, everything felt off. His hands shook, the swing went wrong, and the ball flew “straight into the bushes.” His friends laughed, but what really hurt was how a small mistake instantly ruined his calm. When he muttered a single swear, “that moment clung to him like a weight.”
Instead of going home afterward, Ethan drove around until he stopped at a small chapel he often passed. Sitting quietly in the back, he realized the real problem wasn’t the bad shot — it was how easily he had surrendered his peace.
The next weekend, when another mistake sent the ball into a sand trap, he reacted differently. This time, Ethan simply smiled. With that small shift, something inside him eased. His swing felt lighter, and he played with a focus and freedom he hadn’t felt in years.
As the sun set and he packed up his clubs, Ethan noticed a small plaque near the clubhouse that he had never paid attention to before. It read, “The calm golfer wins twice.”
In that moment, he finally understood what it meant: staying calm mattered more than any perfect shot.