Why We Play: Golf and the Great Outdoors

Written by NCGA Staff | Apr 9, 2026 4:26:17 PM

This article originally appeared in the March issue of NCGA Golf Magazine  

By Shane Ryan

This year, mother nature decided to hit me with an actual, honest-to-god winter, the first one I can remember in 15 years since my wife and I moved. Typically, there's golf to be played at least in spurts between December and March, and if there's snow, it's the kind that sticks around for a couple hours before the resurgent sunshine turns it to water and mud. This time, though, freezing temperatures and lingering snow kept me indoors, and it made me realize something: I need golf to be outside. I never thought of the sport as an excuse to be in nature, but it has come to fulfill that function for me in a way I didn't notice until it was taken away.

(My response, by the way, was to become a cliche of a middle-aged man and dive into bird-watching. If it holds any appeal to you, I recommend it wholeheartedly as a way to keep in touch with mother nature when the golf course is off-limits; snow and cold aren't going to keep you out of the woods.)

Since coming to that realization, I've become more conscious of the soothing aspects of simply being outside when I play golf. This isn't easy for me, because my natural state of existence is pretty far from Zen. I spend a lot of time angry at my own game, and on the rare times when I'm thinking about nature, a lot of that thought is spent on lamenting the summer heat or studiously running esoteric formulas involving the dew point to decide whether I should take a cart or not.

But not only does absence make the heart grow fonder—it opens our eyes to the gifts we couldn't recognize when they were in front of us. Walking nine holes outside had a restorative effect on my psyche, my mental health, that wasn't apparent until I had to spend entire days indoors and couldn't fail to notice the creeping sense of lethargy and ennui. Even then, it took me a while to suss out the cause, and it wasn't until I began forcing myself to take walks despite the nasty winter weather that the difference became apparent, and with it the realization: Oh yeah, my head isn't screwed on straight unless I'm outside, and I'm not outside unless I'm playing golf. Ergo, golf is the conduit to nature, and nature is the conduit to health. Let's all raise a glass to golf, the middleman we never knew we needed.

It reminded me of when my oldest daughter was in her infant stages and was in the midst of a crying jag that nothing would stop. I'd pace the house, bouncing lightly, I'd sing to her (this probably made it worse), and I'd offer whatever bottle or novelty chewing device was most readily available. But I soon learned that only one thing could fix it: stepping outside. The minute that fresh air hit, her face would un-contort, and a look of quiet curiosity would spread over her features. Nature was the cure.

I wonder if, in less obvious ways, that dynamic persists as we grow. Because we don't have the easy feedback of crying squalls, we can't read the cause-and-effect quite as cleanly, but that doesn't mean it isn't playing out internally in equally profound ways.

Which makes golf one of the most crucial things I can do for my own secret psychological health. Once you know that, you start to notice and appreciate things a bit more—the way the loblolly pines seem to sway perilously in even light wind; the water snake that weaves his sinuous way through the creek on the front nine; the golden wheat color of the grass in winter, and how it might be as beautiful as the lush green that follows.

None of it is a cure-all. I'm still embarrassingly reactive when it comes to my own game, and I can still go long minutes locked inside my own head. But then the shot is over, the club is back in the bag, and I'm walking again, one foot after another, a slight breeze blowing if I'm lucky, and I'll take in the trees and clouds and birds or simply close my eyes, and at first I'll feel a conscious sense of gratitude, and then, briefly, I'll disappear.