Lyne,
The first time I played NGLA was in 2001 and the last in 2003 and I still feel the same way. I can remember every hole like it was a part of my being. When I qualified for the US Mid-Am in 2010 it was played at Atlantic GC a few mile down the road. I drove over to NGLA and just stood on the side of the road next to 13 and 14 and then down near the 17th green looking up at the tee shot on 18 and it was like seeing the girl that you let get away. Like the ending to Dr. Zhivago, you're calling out to her and she can't hear you. Oh, what I would do to play another round there.
Keep in mind, everytime I played NGLA, except for one, I played it following an 18 hole round at Shinnecock. Those are still the greatest 36 hole days I've ever had and I doubt they will ever be topped.
I had been to Scotland before I had played NGLA and I played all the great courses over there. TOC is still my favorite course for what it represents and it's history/lack of heavy influence from human engineering. However, NGLA represents to me a museum piece of architecture that is the standard bearer of what great golf architecture can be. It is a living art piece that allows you more than to just observe, it allows you to truly interact with it on a sporting, physical, and spiritual way. I could wax poetic on the place until I were dead. My favorite conversation that I have ever had at a GCA type function (King's Putter II) was with Gib Papazian on the strategy of each hole. Many of the participants of the event had yet to play NGLA and sat there and watched Gib and I draw out in pencil the schematics of each hole on the white tablecloths in the Pasatiempo grill room. As many of you know, Gib has one of the greatest minds of anyone I've ever met and it was so fun to see him point things out that I hadn't noticed. I could spend weeks just walking the course and never play it and still get a thrill from the experience.
If you don't "get" NGLA then in my opinion, you don't "get" golf.
Jeff F.