Just a random reflection, mostly OT:
Now that I have *no* golf courses to play, just about *every* golf course I've ever played seems, in memory, like a very good one.
That's not to say that they are all '10s', or even close; certain qualitative differences do clearly remain present in my mind.
But the many & varied & taste-and-temperament-based *distinctions* I've always made, the specific ways I've compared the good ones (ie the ones I liked) to the not-so-good (the ones I didn't), have now mostly faded away.
It's as if I've long been 'looking at' the golf courses I play through a microscope or magnifying glass, and now (in memory) I'm looking at them with a bird's eye view instead.
Right now, that latter 'lens' seems like the much more sensible -- and even more relevant/meaningful -- one. What a silly/fruitless way to look at a golf course, it now seems, to look at a 200 acre field of play through a magnifying glass.
And truth be told, from that bird's eye perspective a Stanley Thompson course isn't very much different at all than one by Rene Muylaert, nor is one by Dr Mac all that different than one by Doug Carrick, or one by Robbie Robison than one by Mr Anonymous.
I wonder: when things get back to whatever is 'normal', will I be able to retain this new perspective? But also: should I even want to try?