MAL 35:20 MAL35 | Page 6

CROSSFIRE Life And The Games We Play: Stick In It Till The End! By Herman Githinji A t the beginning of the year 2020, we made plans as usual. If you are the kind of a guy who writes year goals, plans, and actions, life must have looked bright on paper after a very difficult 2019. As I pen this down we are just in March and our plans have been completely blown off the radar by the Coronavirus. I started playing golf again. Now, that is another game that changes you just like the Corona. Those who complain of mothers-in-law, now golf is your real mother in law. It is so unpredictable and sits on you properly, and there is nothing you can do. The only thing, just like the mother in law, is the awareness that I chose this and have to deal with it. It is very hard to understand how a guy in China enjoying his delicacies eats a bat, and the whole world is forced to wash hands. That’s power. We are now hostages not really understanding how we got ourselves here. But one thing we know is that the virus is changing the world order. Something, actually many things, are shifting. We will never ever be the same again. I love playing golf alone so that I save myself some embarrassments. I don’t like guys watching me making a fool of myself when hitting the ball like a misguided bullet into the bush. The basic idea of golf is to just hit that ball with a club from one point to another within a marked fairway. Fairways always look broad but wait until you hit a ball, and you realize how narrow they are. I have discovered how hard it is to stay in the house. Just last year, you stayed in the house lounging and you were called a couch potato. Today they call you a responsible citizen. But golf is not all about frustrations, in it you enjoy a good walk. This is recommended especially when your knees start to give. Despite it being a good game for seniors, you nevertheless need fairly good eyesight, especially in Western Countries, where you don’t have caddies. Anyways, to get myself out of the house, In life the first mistake we make is not to identify our course, limits, and milestones. What course or fairway I am going to fol- low? What are the limits to that fairway? What will help me recognize when I am off my fairway? When you identify and mark your fairway, get yourself in it and start your game. 04 MAL35/20 ISSUE An old friend of mine in Australia called Keith used to come with his elderly wife for her to watch where the balls land as he hits them. Unfortunately, the wife was equally blind, and she could not really pinpoint where the ball went. They argued all the time on the golf course. Life journey has a close similarity to golf. First, you have to start somewhere and finish somewhere. Second, you have to play within the fairway all the time, like good golfers do. If you do that, you surely achieve your goals easily and faster. But once in a while we all make mistakes and veer off the fairway. It is what you do when you are in the bush that determines overall success, or failure, in golf as well as in life. Imagine a golfer who hits the ball to the bush and instead of trying to get the ball back into the fairway, he keeps hitting it further away into the bush. That is what most people do in real life. When they make a mistake, and get off the fairway, instead of gathering and correcting themselves back into their plans, they continue with their bad habits, repeating the same mistakes, henceforth digging themselves further into deeper problems. While in the bush, people around you suffer too. Emotionally or financially, they suffer with you. At Sigona Golf Club, caddies are fairly old guys, a good number of them are over the 50s. When I went to play there one day, they competed to caddy for me because my new bag created an impression to them that I was a good golfer. When we started playing and I started