I use this app that keeps my handicap. As professionals, we don't keep handicaps. But as a kid, I was so excited about seeing how low I could get my handicap. So that's one app I really do use a lot.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
And yeah, my handicap was down to a 10 when we were at the thick of it. I trained for six or seven months, golfing every day for six hours, seven days a week, with eight trainers. It was intense.
A handicap is like trying to race and you have a ten pound weight stuck to your waist. That is a handicap.
I sort of play golf because a lot of my friends are into it, but I'm awful - my handicap is about six or seven thousand.
A handicap is only if you let it be a handicap.
There are a lot of apps that are fun to use - they're utility apps; they're fine. But there are a fraction of apps that are in the cream of the crop. You just need to be in the cream of the crop to get noticed.
There are so many opportunities in life, that the loss of two or three capabilities is not necessarily debilitating. A handicap can give you the opportunity to focus more on art, writing, or music.
I'm officially disabled, but I'm truly enabled because of my lack of limbs. My unique challenges have opened up unique opportunities to reach so many in need.
In my life, I'd like to play more golf and, and get a decent handicap.
When I was small, my most serious handicap was a painful bashfulness in the presence of strangers.
My favorite app is 'StumbleUpon,' because it just gives you interesting things that are sometimes exactly the stuff I'm interested in and sometimes just silly and funny.
No opposing quotes found.