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New Golf expressions

A ‘Rock Hudson’ – a putt that looked straight, but wasn’t.

A ‘Saddam Hussein’ – from one bunker into another.

A ‘Yasser Arafat’ – butt ugly and in the sand.

A ‘John Kennedy Jr.’ – didn’t quite make it over the water.

A ‘Rodney King’ – over-clubbed.

An ‘O.J.’- got away with one.

A ‘Princess Grace’ – should have used a driver.

A ‘Princess Di’ – shouldn’t have used the driver.

A ‘Condom’ – safe, but didn’t feel very good.

A ‘Brazilian’ – shaved the hole.

A ‘Rush Limbaugh’ – a little to the right.

A ‘Nancy Pelosi’ – Way to the left and out of bounds.

A ‘James Joyce’ – a putt that’s impossible to read.

A ‘Ted Kennedy’ – goes in the water and jumps out.

A ‘Pee Wee Herman’ – too much wrist.

A ‘Sonny Bono’ – straight into the trees.

A ‘Paris Hilton’ – a very expensive hole.

A `Tiger Woods’ – Wrong Hole.

Always Be Learning

When you love to do something, you enjoy learning more and more about it.  Most active traders would rather trade than do just about anything else.  Do we enjoy the learning?  Depends upon how we come upon it.  When something is a core value, our fascination with learning more about it is endless.  You can’t get enough of it.  However, when we learn through painful experience, such as the hard knocks of trading, enough certainly is enough.

Losses are tough.  Errors and mistakes are bothersome.  And, yet there’s almost always a lesson in there if you remain alert to improving.  I’ve always said that mistakes are okay if you acknowledge them and learn from them.  James Joyce said, “Mistakes are portals of discovery.

As I trade and make mistakes, I say to myself, “I don’t have to do that again.”  And I feel reassured and optimistic about the future. Of course, I do, “do that again”.  We all do.  There are certain default attitudes and positions we naturally fall prey to.  But with an attitude of learning, we do it less and less until we (hopefully) stop repeating the unhelpful thinking and behaving. (more…)

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