In the world of YouTube golf content, it’s easy to feel pressure to only show the good shots, the perfect rounds, and the highlight moments. But I’ve made a decision:
I will never fake it on YouTube golf.
I choose authenticity over appearance.
Golf is hard. Some days I play well, and some days I don’t. But I’m willing to post the bad rounds, the missed shots, and the struggles because that’s what most golfers actually experience. Not everyone is shooting even par or under par every time they tee it up.
That’s real golf.
I also don’t mind people seeing the fluctuation in my game. Growth in golf isn’t linear. There are highs, lows, frustrating rounds, and breakthrough moments. Showing only perfection creates a version of golf that isn’t honest.
But the biggest reason I refuse to fake my golf content is this:
I never want my relationship with the Lord to become dependent on how good or bad I play.
If I post a bad round, the gospel will still be shared.
If I post a great round, the gospel will still be shared.
The mission doesn’t change based on my scorecard.
Maybe that’s what separates my content from others. I’m okay showing the bad shots. I don’t need to retake every swing to make it go viral ( whihc going viral would be dope) or hide the struggle just to protect an image or satisfy an audience. It will be posted.
The day I refuse to post an episode because I played poorly is the day that I say golf is more important than the gospel.
And that can never happen.
So no matter what happens on the course — whether it’s my best golf or my worst golf — the content will still be posted, and the gospel will still be shared.
…But trust me, I’m still trying to get better. 😂
You are a very honest and Godly person. Keep up your endeavor with golf and God. I believe you are correct that the gospel is more important than golf. Keep up the great work.
Amen !