Ryan,
Please take me to task on anything I actually suggested, but don't attribute arguments to me that I haven't made. I don't want to replace caddies. I don't even like carts. I just don't think I should be required to use or not use either. My competitive golf experience came to an end when my club of many years decided to institute a mandatory riding policy for weekend and holiday mornings. I resisted it completely, one year not riding a single round even while playing in 100*+ degree heat in the middle of the day during our four-month long summer season. It was my choice, and I alone suffered the considerable consequences. In hindsight, I am not sure that I would do it again.
Melvyn,
Will all due affection and respect, we live in two different universes. And I thought that we had a somewhat of a common language. If me riding a cart takes away from your enjoyment, you must be one difficult person to be around. And if everyone with a bad back, a cold, a mild fever, or any preference, condition, or orientation which you may not approve should forgo playing golf or being around other people, golf and our world are indeed in sorry shape. I will endeavor from referencing you again. I am sorry to have it done this time.
Kirk,
Best wishes on your journey, but don't beat yourself up too much. As a golf instructor told me recently, gaining weight is an evolutionary process wired into us for thousands of years as a way of preparing for periods of famine. His advice was to moderate, but enjoy myself. Randy Newman might have written his song about fat people. BTW, there's a lot of junk science out there about weight and health. Having said all this, my unpaid personal trainer, Kyle Henderson, is my model. We should all be as fit as he.