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 Would you like to . . .
- Take your game to a new level?
- Develop a more powerful golf swing?
- Achieve a lower handicap
and better golf scores?
- Add power to your drives to improve your distance?
- Add consistency to your swing?
- Hit longer straighter drives?
- Play to your best potential?
People who don't play golf, often think it's a simple game - until they try it, that is. Swinging a 36" golf club at around 100mph while standing in a very awkward position in a very small space is not easy! It can put a strain on even the fittest body. It is hardly surprising that golfers, both professional and amateur, suffer from aches and pains and golf-related injuries.
If you are a golfer, you probably know that feeling of back strain which comes from the unnatural
movements and the leaning forward. You may suffer from shoulder and wrist pains. If so, you will be relieved to know that there is a therapy which, time and again, is helping golfers like yourself.
The Bowen
Technique is quite literally taking the sporting world by storm. Sports professionals of all kinds, and particularly golfers, are finding it surpasses all other therapies when it comes to helping injuries heal faster and easing pain and tension in different parts of the body. But, as those golfers will tell you, Bowen is not just about healing injuries. More and more players are finding Bowen boosts energy, increases mobility and co-ordination - and, consequently,improves their game.
Testimonials from some of the world's top golf professionals, like Carl Mason, show they are finding Bowen to be the answer they have been looking for.
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Carl Mason was preparing for the De Vere Northumberland Seniors
Classic when he started to feel some severe lower back pain. Fellow
golfer, Geoff Lightle who was playing in the curtain-raising pro-am
with Mason, suggested Bowen.
Carl says after just one treatment, the pain
eased and the next day he broke the course record. Delighted, he had one
further treatment that evening and the following day went on to win the tournament. When Carl was
awarded his trophy he told the crowd he owed his win to Bowen.
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