Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Tiger Woods







Tiger Woods says the competitiveness he learned from his mother helped him overcome a childhood stutter. In an interview with CBS "60 Minutes" Tiger Woods says, "The words got lost, you know, somewhere between the brain and the mouth. And it was very difficult, but I fought through it. I went to a school to try and get over that, and I just would would work my tail off."




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Tiger also had some extra help. "I would talk to my dog and he would sit there and listen, and he'd fall asleep," Woods says. "I finally learned how to do that, without stuttering all over myself."





















3 comments:

  1. Break up some of this text. Add pictures too.

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  2. You need more for his background. Where you talk about his stuttering should be posted as his adversity. Where are all of your other posts?

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  3. I think that it's neat that he didn't let his stuttering problem keep him from being one of the most famous golfers in the PGA tour.

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