Garland:
You do have to admit her childhood was at odds with the way most (and by that I mean 99.9 percent) children are raised these days. I mean, she had endorsement contracts prior to being able to legally drive, I believe, and someone had to be arranging it, and it's fair to assume her parents had a role.
One only has to look at the One Who Shall Not Be Mentioned (male version) to see first-hand the possible outcomes of a childhood spent being pushed to be the next Greatest Thing on Earth.
What typifies the other 99.9%?
Nothin'.
There are little or no rules when it comes to raising kids - that's something every parent learns very quickly. There is wisdom passed down, but look at how often that is quickly discarded for the latest flavor of the month.
Whose way is right? Tiger's? Phil's? Furyk's? Ty Tryon's? Christie Kerr's? Annika's? Jack's? Hogan's? Try to find a common theme among these disparate figures,
aside from an obsession with playing golf. It's just not there. If it were, we'd all be raising Tigers - or at least Jacks.
Unless someone inside the family wants to come out and say otherwise, I choose to believe Michelle's parent's acted in what they felt was her best interests, and I think for anyone on here to conclude otherwise is to presume waaaaaaaaaaaaaaaay too much (sometimes Mattspeak just works so well...)
Kind of ironic that a bunch of guys who shout down anyone who comments on a course without playing it are so quick to provide Monday morning parenting.
I'm not afraid to comment on pix, but I am afraid to comment on parenting. Guess I'm still weird.
Time to leave the sweatshop and hit the pool...have a good night, eveyone.