Tour winners return for the first time in a year, powered by a mood-changing strategy

Aaron Wise was at the Tulum Championship at Korn Ferry Tour last week.
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Aaron Wise wants to tell you four things. There is one more thing.
In a video posted to his Instagram account a few days ago, he introduced them in this way:
“You’ve been on this planet for a long time and you never know what’s going to happen.”
To start Wise's story, you should know that he is as good as their coming. Oregon's NCAA champion. The PGA Tour champion is 21 years old and only started on his 26th Tour. “That’s everything I dreamed about,” Wise said on Byron Nelson that day. “I think when it rains today, I really tear the route because it allows me to hit the driver, which is my strength. I have a lot of short irons in my hand and can make a lot of birdies.” Later that year, he was named the PGA Tour Rookie of the Year.
What followed was a solid game. He moved to No. 33 in the world.
But in late March 2023, he withdrew from the Masters just a few days before the game. The news came through his Instagram story, where he wrote the following, and “It hurts, but it needs to.
“Golf is a mental game, both a physical skill and a hard effort for me. I don’t think the meaning of playing in Augusta, but I know I need to spend some time focusing on my mental health so that I can get back to my competitive level. I’m proud.”
He played four games for the rest of that year and then finished. He played in just one game last year, the Puerto Rico Open in mid-March, and withdrew shortly before he started another game.
However, this week, Wise will be competing again on the PGA Tour, which is on the Myrtle Beach Classic, which is against the Truist champion. He started four Korn Ferry Tour games ahead of this year. Now back to that Instagram video. It includes some of his first sentences after a while.
He said an idea helped him. Maybe it will help you.
Here is the full message:
“You’ve been on this planet for a long time and you never know what’s going to happen. There can be bad rest periods, you can have bad loopholes, and being able to bounce off these things and monitor and keep yourself at your level in progress is a huge advantage.
“I can handle each situation with a completely different mindset. I went through the day I just spent and I thought of four positive things, I thought of one negative thing that happened, and if something better happens again, I could change that negative thing. Such things make it better. Such things just change your whole mood in five to 10 minutes, which makes you a huge difference. This makes it more positive.
Editor's Note: The video was shot with “Love” and your ideas. More information about the group, Please click here.
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