Character test on the 19th hole

Medinah Country Club

In August of 2003, I was invited by a business friend to play in a guest-member golf outing at Medinah Country Club. The course is famous for its difficulty and hosting professional golf tournaments such as the US Open in 1949, 1975, and 1990. My business friend, a commercial printing broker, helped me accomplish a number of great things, such as organizing a highly successful literacy support program reaching 175 public libraries and 375,000 families, and also producing a poster that placed in the top four Cream of the Crop running posters from Runner’s World Magazine.

Working with him was great even though our politics and personal views were political opposites. He was conservative and I am a liberal and progressive. But we liked each other and often had lunch to discuss our personal and professional lives. Once in a while, we’d go golfing together.

Honest advice

But he was the much better golfer. I shoot in the 80s and he was an ace at golf, often scoring in the 70s even on tough courses such as Medinah. Thus when he invited me to play in a golf outing at that course, his advice was simple and sound: “If you hit into the woods, play it out to the fairway. Don’t try to hit through them.”

I was eager to try playing the course because my late grandfather-in-law was once a club champion of some sort at Medinah. But my father-in-law didn’t care for the game of golf and never used his Medinah membership for anything but taking his kids to the restaurant and other fun. When asked why he didn’t play golf, my father-in-law replied, “Nature Is My Country Club.”

That quote stuck with me, and I used it years later as the title of the book I wrote about the golf industry and its changing dynamics.

Christopher cudworth's book

Nature Is Our Country Club by Christopher Cudworth

So when I finally played Medinah, I paid close attention to my conservative friend’s advice. We teed off under clear and beautiful August skies, but during the first few holes the clouds moved in and were threatening rain. Suddenly, sheets of driving droplets poured through the trees as if there were an air raid going on. We piled into our golf carts and headed toward the ninth hole turnaround spot, but the rain kept up and soon the fairways shone as if they were an ice-skating rink. We piled into our carts during a partial pause in the storm and hustled back to the main clubhouse.

Rainout

The outing was cancelled, so the club food service swung into action as we gathered in damp shirts to have a meal and talk about the shots we’d made and missed. The next day, I pulled out my quasi-official personal journal, and wrote about the experience, which ended weirdly, and that’s the whole point of this story. What do you do, and how do you respond, when life throws corrupt circumstances your way?

Journal Entry August 7, 2003

“Nature was not able to be denied yesterday. In spite of millions of dollars of manipulation of a golf landscape. In spite of affectations in architecture and social structure. In spite of metal clubs and synthentic balls and electric carts, the rains came furiously and washed away the Camel Trail Golf Outing at Medinah Country Club.”

“It was an impressive environment if you like your thick woods without leaf litter, your ponds without grass along the edges and your open fields manicured to a carpet length smoothness. This time around I heard and saw no birds, I realize. Not even a vagrant heron in the shallows, for there were, apparently, no shallows in the lakes. Just opaque, moody depths that the golfers call hazards. It is an interesting metaphor if you stop to consider the manifold meanings of the word hazard. And their role in the game of golf is nearly absolute save for a lucky skip if a shot is hit so low the ball skims over the surface to safety.”

“The entire course became a waterway when the skies, heated to a froth by the August sun, unleashed. We played a hole in the sprinkles, but when driven to the Halfway House (not one for the poor, but for the wealthy) accompanied by one of our fore caddies, a strange allotment of youth and ethnicity including our own, a quiet Latino named Jesus. His nervous but eager eyes and partial grasp of the language actually made me more comfortable in the situation. I too felt like a foreigner in the face of so much. At so much a cost.”

“We sat and drank as the rain fell straight down from the sky. Light beer and cigars at our table. Less calories and more smoke. The cadre of men stood close to one another and talked loudly, determined I guess to ward off what might be perceived as too much of an intimacy. We talked of things men in a group talk about; other rounds, other exploits, drugs of our youth, and women.”

“But the storm would not let up to relieve us of these sentimental strivings, so we trekked to the clubhouse in our sheltered carts which still could not keep out the wind and rain, especially for Jesus, whose back got soaked while perched on the front of the cart. Giant puddles whooshed as we followed the paths, and one could see rivulets and pools forming on every fairway. Lightning flashed and thunder crashed again. We left behind a tree on the 7th hole dated to 1664. It has seen, if the claims are correct, over 440 years of storms, snows, heat, cold, winds and the like. It too is a hazard for anyone who hooks his drive on #7 at Medinah. A little black sign proclaims the tree a a State Champ for the ages.”

“We dine on giant slabs of red beef and more drinks. The dinner talk turns briefly to business while the storm sinks to the south. Twillight comes with sunshine and slowly the fairways clear of water but the greenskeeper declares the course officially closed. We are too late to finish a round anyway, darkness a worse enemy even than lightning, to a golfer.”

“I recall that my second shot remains perched in the grass on the 7th fairway, or was it in the rough? I will never know. The course vanished behind me like the memory of a funeral. We came into the lavish clubhouse, furnished and decorated like a regal crypt, to toast ourselves or something.”

“After dinner it was Showtime. An obscene but somewhat sweet comedian cracked wise on dogs, wives, kids, and driving, especially drunk driving.

 ‘HOW AM I GOING TO GET HOME THEN?” he taunted the crowd. Some joke.”

“Then came the strippers, bare to the bone, which I didn’t know was legal. The two pretty girls allowed four willing men the chance to grope them repeatedly while the crowd howled vicariously. The show ended and a host of apparently decent men stood up to leave when the girls started working the audience for money. Like I said earlier, too much intimacy is simply too much for a crew this removed from nature, human and otherwise.”

And all of this is true exactly as I described it. When relating this story I was once challenged by someone defending Medinah’s honor. “They don’t allow stuff like that there,” the apologetic attempted to claim. “All I know is what I saw,” I responded. “I turned to the guys at my table and told them, ‘I don’t know about you, but I’m married. And I’m leaving. And we all left before the strippers got to our table.'”

We live in an age when that scene at Medinah is the regular appetite of those at Mar-a Lago, and the White House improper, it seems.

Christopher Cudworth is the author of the book Nature is Our Country Club: How Golf Explains Sustainability In A Changing World.

Cymbalism is hard at work in America


UNITED STATES – NOVEMBER 19: Rudolph Giuliani, attorney for President Donald Trump, conducts a news conference at the Republican National Committee, on lawsuits regarding the outcome of the 2020 presidential election on Thursday, November 19, 2020. (Photo By Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)

Unless you live under a rock, you likely saw star witness Melissa Carone testifying at the Michigan election hearings at the behest of that crotch-grabbing, apelike fart machine known as Rudy Giuliani. To Trump Supporters, he’s the Great Ape of the GOP. To his detractors, he’s a sad little monkey banging conspiratorial cymbals (symbols) together in hopes of making a few bucks before his battery runs out.

Carone’s daftly aggressive, self-proclaimed expert testimony at the so-called hearings went viral because her seemingly drunken, completely unproven claims about results from that state’s election were so far-fetched even her hairdo could not seem to keep up with the madness. The crazies seemed to be spewing out the top of her cranium.

The United States is repeatedly plagued by drama of this nature. It is being driven by claims of Republicans (with and without hair) that the election was fixed. All these claims have proven pointless, false and outright scandalous in court. But they keep parading new monkeys in front of judges across the country. More cymbals. More clashes.

The reality show spectacle of modern day politics is a carnival side show highlighted by the GOP’s witless attraction to the hot mess world of blathering blondes and quasi-attractive female attack dogs who earn their keep saying things only the terminally ditzy dare utter in public. Sarah Palin turned out to be the rule, not the exception. They wanted to make her Vice President of the United States, but she sounded quite a bit like Melissa Carone at times.

But Carone takes the hapless blather to a new level. It is also no coincidence that the ecklessly bold hairstyle of Melissa Carone holds quite a parallel to the tragically coiffed visage of Donald Trump. But truth be told, he’s far more vain, drama-driven and idiotic than any female in history. His hairdo is symbolic of a desperate brand of vanity and a need for complimentary attention bordering on sociopathy.* He’s a freak, in other words.

The affectations of the terminally vain do matter. They legitimately warn us that appearances do matter. That is especially true when it comes to toxic personalities disguising themselves as credible human beings. The sight of Rudy Giuliani’s bad makeup job running down his face during a press conference is proof that he’s busy hiding something, and failing at it.It may be fear over his crumbling persona or his cymbal-clashing loyalty to his Monkey Master Donald Trump. In any case his appearance and behavior are a sickness of spirit on full display.

The fact that Trump’s supporters so easily dismiss these painfully obvious signals of disturbed minds is evidence of the tribal nature that an ugly jungle ethic has produced these days in America. The vigilante justice hiding just outside the Beltway is no more sophisticated or considerate than a band of murderous chimpanzees.

Are Trump supporters stupid? That’s not the right question. They are tribally devoted. They follow the orders of those in power. That’s far more dangerous than being stupid. That’s the militia mentality at work in America today. It is primal, racist, nationalistic and frankly, quite evil. And Trump loves it.

It is simply unacceptable to cheer on a being whose claims to authority are so base they represent a step backward in human evolution. We should never malign a beast so nobly earnest as the orangutan, and that is not the intention here. But when it comes to the lower instincts of primates in general, we have to consider both appearances and facts. Donald Trump appears to be functioning at a cognizance level just below human most of the time. He refuses to read even the most basic information assigned to his job. He denigrates medicine and science.

As a point of consideration about the face of this blunt trauma mentality, one of these photos is an image of an angry Donald Trump. The other is an apparently disturbed orangutan. See if you can honestly tell the difference?

The point we’re making here is that supporting Donald Trump constitutes a step back from what civilized people believe about human society. The display of sloppy rhetoric combined with primal gossip by Melissa Carone serves as a textbook example of cultural devolution. It’s hidden behind sex and ritualized behavior just like it is in nature, but the purposes are the same. It’s about gaining and keeping control over others.

Melissa Carone in her petulant monkey mode.

True to form, Carone behaved like a snotty little monkey at the zoo flinging shit against the windows to disturb the onlookers and get a reaction out of everyone. This is how Trump behaves as well. When he leaves, they’re going to have to hose down the insides of the windows at the White House. He’s been holed up flinging shit at the world for weeks now.

This is what we’ve been reduced to in America. It’s long past time to admit that Trumpian Zoo is a failed experiment in jungle despotism. He needs to be sent back to his own cage in Mar-A-Lago where he can carouse with the likes of Melania and Melissa and please himself openly without our having to put up with his lowbrow antics and greedy Banana Republic appeals.

Let the man have his grunting mates and a lacivious harem. That’s how he likes to live, and he has the right to do so. It’s just not what the Founding Fathers had in mind for a civilized nation like the United States of America.

*Sociopathy refers to a pattern of antisocial behaviors and attitudes, including manipulation, deceit, aggression, and a lack of empathy for others.