Or if you perceive you lay lemons on the table, do you lose some self-worth?
Please, with all due respect, spare the Dr Phil manure. Shoot straight.
Please, with all due respect, spare the Dr Phil manure. Shoot straight.
Or if you perceive you lay lemons on the table, do you lose some self-worth?
Please, with all due respect, spare the Dr Phil manure. Shoot straight.
I think that the feeling that you are talking about is integral to the nature of the competitive individual. I think that without it everyone would simply be Sunday golfers, to coin a term. It is that need for self validation through competition (in one form or another) that drives us to need to outperform others.
I'm not saying it is good or bad. It just is.
Tommy
Or if you perceive you lay lemons on the table, do you lose some self-worth?
Please, with all due respect, spare the Dr Phil manure. Shoot straight.
The hell its not self worth.....especially if this is what you do in life.
If your occupation happens to be "Pool Player" then self worth is right up there, why wouldn't it be.
No one likes to suck...it makes you feel worthless. When you accomplish then you feel rich inside and in your pocket.
Can't tell me that self worth would not come into play when you have some players out there that have/had/are putting everything in their entire being into being a champion, becoming a champion or staying a champion.
If your just a civilian then your life affects your game.....what you do in life carries over into your game.
For a lucky few of us, what we do in our games affects our lives....how we address the game is how we address life, and ourselves.
so yea self worth is a big factor,
-Grey Ghost-
I answered yes in what I believe to have been the spirit & intent of the choice of words used. I think many are reading more into the term than was literally intended.
I do believe that most of us feel some sense of ego involvement in doing what we've invested so much time and energy into developing a degree of proficiency at - and rightly so. Success breeds a sense of accomplishment, and failures a sense opf disappointment.
I think if you care about your devotions, then you come to associate them with your perceived "self".