
In September 1991, at the Ryder Cup on Kiawah Island, Bernhard Langer stood over a putt he had made thousands of times before and could not trust himself to make now. It was the sort of distance that professional golfers do not ordinarily regard as a problem. They have made putts like this so often that the act barely qualifies as a decision. The body knows what to do. Six feet, after all, is not very far. It is two unhurried steps. The match, and with it the Ryder Cup, rested on the stroke. Which is why what happened next was so bewildering.
Langer settled over the ball, drew the putter back, and then his hands did something that hands are not supposed to do. They flickered, a tiny involuntary spasm, like a flinch at a noise that had not come. The putter jerked. The ball wobbled off its line and slid past the hole with the apologetic air. Langer stared at his hands as though they belonged to somebody else.
In golfing circles the condition has a name. They call it the yips. It is a small, faintly comic word for what is, by all accounts, a deeply harrowing experience, the sudden inability to do the thing you have spent your entire life learning to do supremely well. Which raises an interesting question. How does a person forget something they never had to remember in the first place?
You can try this yourself. Say your name out loud. Now say it again, but this time pay attention to how your tongue moves, where it touches your teeth, how the sound is formed. The second version is usually worse. Slightly slower. Slightly less natural. Something that required no effort a moment ago now feels faintly mechanical. Nothing has been forgotten. Something has been interrupted.
The yips are not confined to golf, though golf seems to suffer from them disproportionately, in the way certain families are disproportionately afflicted by bad luck or unusual dental arrangements. Baseball players get them. Cricketers get them. Pianists get them, seizing up on passages they once played effortlessly. Even darts players get them, which must be particularly annoying when you consider that the entire biomechanical demand of the sport is a single controlled flick of the wrist.
For a long time the yips were treated as a psychological curiosity. But neuroscience, which has a habit of making the mysterious seem merely complicated, offers a clearer picture. The brain, like any good organization, has departments.
Consider something simple. Walk across a room. You do not plan each step. You do not issue instructions to your knees. You do not negotiate with your ankles. And yet you arrive, more or less upright, without incident. This is the work of the basal ganglia, a cluster of structures buried deep in the cerebral interior, quietly sequencing movements into smooth, automatic routines. They run the factory floor. They are not glamorous. Nobody writes poems about the basal ganglia. But they are extraordinarily good at their job.
Now try walking again, but this time pay attention to each step. Notice where your foot lands. Consider the angle of your knee. Think about balance. The experience becomes slower, slightly awkward, faintly unnatural. You may not fall over, but you will not glide. Something has entered the system.
Behind the scenes, the cerebellum, tucked at the back of the skull like a small decorative cauliflower, is handling timing and calibration, the difference between a movement that is slightly off and one that is exactly right. It makes quiet corrections you never notice, like a stagehand adjusting the lighting during a play. And then there is the prefrontal cortex, sitting just behind the forehead, concerned with planning, reasoning, and what neuroscientists delicately call executive function. It is the management layer. It decides what to do, monitors whether it is being done correctly, and worries about what might go wrong.
Here is the critical thing. When you are very good at something, when you have practiced it thousands of times until it feels natural, the movement runs almost entirely through the basal ganglia and cerebellum. The prefrontal cortex, having done its work during the long years of learning, steps back. It trusts the system. It goes upstairs and reads the newspaper. Elite skill lives below conscious awareness.
The yips begin, or at least one persuasive theory suggests they do, when the prefrontal cortex decides to come back downstairs. Neuroscientists call this reinvestment, which is a characteristically dry term for what amounts to a hostile management takeover. The conscious mind, for reasons that may involve pressure, anxiety, or simply a bad Tuesday, begins supervising a process that was running perfectly well without supervision.
The golfer starts thinking. Keep the wrists steady. Do not decelerate. Stay square. These are sensible instructions. The problem is that the conscious mind delivers them in the wrong language. Conscious thought is slow, analytical, and sequential, processing one thing at a time like someone reading aloud from a manual, while motor execution is fast, automatic, and parallel, processing many signals simultaneously like an orchestra playing from memory. When the manual reader tries to conduct the orchestra, the result is not improved precision. The result is chaos.

For Bernhard Langer, what followed was a private ordeal conducted in the most public of settings. Golf gives its participants an almost cruel amount of time to think. A tennis player who mishits a serve can immediately hit another. A footballer who misplaces a pass is swept along by the flow of play. A golfer must walk to the ball, stand over it, and execute a movement lasting roughly one and a half seconds, all while several thousand people watch in silence. For a person with the yips, this silence is not helpful.
Langer tried everything. He changed his grip repeatedly. He practiced obsessively. He searched for control. None of it worked. The problem was not ignorance. The problem was interference. Trying harder only increased the interference. Trying harder was the disease.
The solution, when it came, was structural. Langer switched to a long putter. Instead of relying on the small stabilizing muscles of the wrists and fingers, precisely the muscles most vulnerable to tremor, the long putter shifted control to the larger muscles of the arms and shoulders. The movement changed. The system changed. The brain adapted. The yips did not transfer. Years later, when anchoring was banned, Langer adapted again. He did not overpower the problem. He redesigned it.
Once you see this, it becomes difficult to unsee. Consider writing. A sentence begins easily enough. Words arrive in the right order. The rhythm feels natural. Then, somewhere in the middle, another voice enters. Is this the right word? Should this be shorter? Is this sentence too long? The hand slows. The sentence stiffens. What was fluid becomes deliberate. What was obvious becomes uncertain. The sentence was fine. Then the mind showed up.
Something similar happens in other systems that appear to run smoothly on their own. A rhythm develops. Decisions move quickly. Actions follow one another without much friction. And then, gradually, attention gathers around the process. It is examined more closely. Steps are noticed that had previously gone unnoticed. Explanations begin to accompany actions. Nothing fundamental has changed. And yet the movement feels different. The system does not fail. It hesitates.
The brain works in layers. The prefrontal cortex supervises. The deeper systems execute. The arrangement works beautifully, provided the supervisor knows when to step aside. The yips are what happen when it does not. The mind begins watching a process that cannot perform while being watched.
Bernhard Langer is now in his late sixties. He still competes. He has won more tournaments on the senior tour than almost anyone in history. His story suggests something worth remembering. The skill is still there. The problem is not ability. The problem is attention. Fluency lives below supervision.
The mind, after all, possesses the remarkable ability to interrupt its own intelligence.






