No Matter Your Age, Skill or Body Type, Immediately Benefit from Tathata Golf

Senior Golfer - Tathata Golf

Enjoy the game more with an easy and fun way to improve

Tathata Golf is designed in such a way to allow players of all ages, skill and body type to enjoy the game more with an easier and more fun way to improve within the game of golf utilizing movement and striking principles true for any level.

  • Stretching – Let Tathata stretching movements support your new training by strengthening and opening your body up in the exact ways that it needs to support your motion.
  • Pressure – No matter your age, skill level or body type immediately benefit from an understanding of pressure throughout all of your golf motions, creating life and vitality in your swing.
  • Speed & Strength – Learn simple concepts to hit the ball farther and add distance to all of your clubs helping you shoot lower scores easier.

 

Stretching Movements and Routines

 

Stretching movements and routines throughout the Tathata 60-Day program help you to support the movements of the golf swing and create flexibility where you need it most.

Within days users tell us about how much better their body feels when they go play and old pain they have always had begins to decrease and sometimes go away all together. The stretching really helps to support good golf and a healthy body and is something that all players greatly benefit from, especially those that lack range of motion and experience pain at different points throughout their body.

Those that choose to begin using the stretching routines on a daily basis experience incredible results with how much better their body feels day in and day out.
“Tathata Golf doesn’t just allow someone to play better golf, it allows them to stay injury free. I believe people are going to see phenomenal results when they start to incorporate this into their life.”

– Dr. Jason Loth, Certified Chiropractic Sports Physician,
Certified Strength and Conditioning Specialist

Hit the Ball Further and Higher Than You Have in Years

Most who have played golf have watched someone that creates effortless power and wonder how they do it when it looks like they are barely trying. “It looks so easy and effortless” some will say.

Applying one simple concept from chapter 3 of the Tathata 60-Day program will immediately increase your speed and strength through impact without an overwhelming amount of added effort. You don’t need to be an incredible athlete or have a ton of strength to easily add distance to all of your  shots.

While testing the program and the programs movements many older players began hitting the ball dozens of yards further, not only with their drivers but with all of their clubs. The game became fun again as they were able to hit the ball further and higher into the air than they had in years.

 

Improve Consistency and Eliminate Errant shots

Not only will the program help you add new found speed and strength to your swing, you will also hit the ball more solidly. Nothing hurts scores faster than making poor contact and miss-hitting shots.

Through the entire Tathata 60-Day program your contact will continue to get more and more solid as you begin putting together and applying different principles introduced throughout the different sections. These won’t be things that you have to think about but will simply just start happening as your entire body begins to move more efficiently to support solid contact and eliminate errant shots.

 

So, if you have been playing less golf because of body aches and pains, or because you just don’t hit it as far or as consistently as you used to, let the game be fun again. Let Tathata Golf give you back your game.

Begin Your path

 

Comments

  1. C Vance
    C Vance [ ]

    Just finished day 20. I've found this program to be awesome. Thanks for putting all this great content together. As a 2 handicap golfer I've had moment where I played pretty consiently well, but I've always struggled with various swing thoughts over the years. And as I begin to try to incorporate the body and arms/hand movements I labored a bit over how I was going to remember all the different movements and put them into proper sequence. What helped me with this was doing the 12th body movement in slow motion. By doing this I could think through the various body movements throughout the swing. As I gradually sped up this 12th movement I realized that it I could do it without any thoughts at all. Just a suggestions, others might find this helpful.

  2. Glover [ ]

    I am 53 years old and just started playing golf in May of this year. I've worked hard too improve and have managed to consistently score in the low to mid 90's (which, all my golf friends tell me is pretty good). However, I started feeling like this was as good as I was going to get, so I went to my golf pro at the course I play and signed up for some lessons. I have to honestly say that I received no meaningful instruction whatsoever. i then started watching youtube videos, reading books, watching instruction on TV and ordered a set of videos that "guaranteed" longer drives and lower scores. This never happened. I just finished Day 1 of this course and I already sense a much deeper commitment by the instructor to truly help me play better golf. Obviously, it's too early to tell how much this will improve my game, but I'm cautiously optimistic. I'll let you know how things are going as I progress through the material. C Glover

  3. Kenneth [ ]

    I am 68 years old. I used to be a 10 hdcp. Age and body replacement have taken a toll. I just completed day 15 training. Physically I cannot do all the stretching exercises but my rehab exercises accomplish the same function. My game has gotten progressively worse and I was always saying I wasn't keeping my head where I needed to have it in the proper position. Now I have come to realize my body was out of whack. I have been working at it, but consistently still not there. However, today I finally made a proper and effortlessly swing and hit my drive 30 yards past any drive I have hit in a long time. Sure does help the motivation. Ken Harris

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