allan-nygren--xvKQuNtOhI-unsplash (1).jpg

GOLF’S FUTURE DEPENDS ON HOW IT FEELS.

Golf Yourself Healthy is a wellbeing-first brand exploring how golf is experienced and shaped by culture.

Icon of two interwoven DNA strands in black on a white circular background.

THE PROBLEM

Golf doesn’t have a participation problem. It has an experience problem.

Golf offers clear physical, social, and psychological benefits. Yet for many people, the lived experience of the game does not consistently reflect that promise.

Performance-led cultures, unspoken expectations, and narrow definitions of success can create pressure, exclusion, and quiet disengagement. Many people don’t leave golf because they dislike it — they drift away because they stop feeling they belong.

Golf Yourself Healthy exists to help address this gap by reshaping how golf is framed, discussed, and organised at a cultural level.

WHAT WE BELIEVE

Golf Yourself Healthy is grounded in four core convictions:

Simple black and white line graph icon with five ascending bars.

1. GOLF HAS DEFINED SUCCESS TOO NARROWLY

For too long, improvement has been judged mainly by score, status, and technical ability. When success is measured only in these terms, the experience becomes fragile — especially for the majority who will always remain “average.”

If golf is to retain people long term, it must broaden what success looks like.

Icon of two people with a gear in between, indicating settings or user management.

2. BELONGING IS MORE POWERFUL THAN PERFORMANCE

People stay where they feel safe, valued, and accepted — not where they feel constantly evaluated.

Belonging is not a soft idea. It is a strategic one.
It shapes confidence, resilience, and whether someone chooses to remain part of the game.

Close-up of a metallic trophy or award with engraved details

3. ENJOYMENT IS NOT THE REWARD FOR GETTING BETTER

It is the starting point that makes improvement sustainable.

When enjoyment is postponed until performance improves, the relationship with the game becomes conditional. Over time, that pressure erodes confidence and increases dropout.

Simple line drawing of two hands pressed together in prayer or greeting.

4. CULTURE SHAPES EXPERIENCE MORE THAN INSTRUCTION DOES

Coaching, facilities, and formats all matter.
But the everyday signals — the norms, language, expectations, and behaviours within a club or organisation — shape how the game feels.

Instruction develops skill.
Culture determines whether people stay.

IN PRACTICE

Golf Yourself Healthy operates at the level of ideas and culture. Its work takes shape in two distinct ways.

A man preparing to putt on a golf course with a flagstick nearby and a golf ball close to the hole, during a sunny day with trees and houses in the background.

GOLF YOURSELF HAPPY

The lived, consumer-facing expression of this philosophy — supporting everyday golfers to experience the game with less pressure and greater enjoyment.

A man with long hair and a beard speaking into a microphone in front of a computer monitor, in a room with wooden wall panels and a desk lamp.

INSTITUTIONAL ENGAGEMENT

Dialogue, advisory work, and collaboration with clubs and organisations seeking to create healthier, more sustainable environments within the game.

LEARN MORE ABOUT GYH

In February 2023, Kris Lynch was faced with the sudden loss of his son, Innes. To help process his grief, Kris headed out to the golf course to find serenity and solitude. In those early days of raw emotion, one very clear and eminently positive thought emerged.

If golf could have such a profound effect during this darkest moment, then surely it must be having the same effect for others.

Abstract black and white wave pattern

STAY IN TOUCH