Golfers told me that we are, sometime, not playing as well as we should wish. Myself am sometime in bad day. But i would like to share with you something about hitting the ding:
"Protect the ding, do not hit it" (?????)
Well it is discussed in forum how to hit the ding, and there are 358 tips (I exagerate :) ) to hit the ding. But no method to do not hit it...???
Sériously, we try to hit and if we miss by clicking before on too late, we are concerned to have badly missed the ding. But, now, instead let's think of a goaler wearing pads and protecting the goal in hockey game. He try to stop the puck from hitting the net. Let us apply this method here.
1.- You have the bold ding bar...This is like the goal, or the net
2.-You also have "the pad" (???) That is the small pic you raise up when starting the backswing. It is like a pad. You see that there is a small white arrow pointing down at the bottom of the "START" . That arrow is your "pad" to protect the ding from to be hitted.
Starting your backswing you have to raise that arrow, but rapidly you return that arrow to place it in the middle height on the meter large band ...but you lean that arrow on the bold ding line...it must touch the ding line with it "shoulder". So it is in the path of the meter, protecting the ding. (This is new because all other methods clear the path of the meter and try to stop the meter "by eye only") using peripheral vision.
And If it hit the ding? congratulation, but the purpose is to pay attention to that arrow to "stop" the meter. Your concentration will be directed on that small arrow and surprisingly you will begin to be more accurate with the ding ( I mean protecting the ding) and happyly passing throught, sometime, to ding the meter...will not deceive you. :)
In summary:Using your small white arrow will help you because you have a "blockader" now in front of the ding and you will try to block the meter when reaching that blockader. I was surprised how it is easier to have better meter control. It is finally same as blocking the puck it is not? ...and you get more confidence by practice because you have a new tool.
Hope my explanation will seem understandable to you because my native language is french
Donald