Paige Spiranac calls golf both “the reason I’m in therapy” and her personal sanctuary, exposing the sport’s unique power to torment and heal in the same swing.
Paige Spiranac pulled no punches during a Sunday Instagram Q&A, telling 3.9 million followers that the same game that funds her brand once sent her to therapy.
“I’ve always said that golf is the reason I’m in therapy, and it’s also my therapy,” she wrote, distilling the sport’s duality into a single sentence.
From collegiate prodigy to content empire
Spiranac’s résumé is stacked with dual identities: All-Mountain West Conference selection at San Diego State, 2015 Cozumel Classic mini-tour champion, and now Founder/Equity Owner of Paige Co., a golf-lifestyle brand she just anchored to a long-term deal with Pro Shop.
Yet the scorecards and sponsorships never insulated her from the game’s psychological shrapnel.
“It can be so infuriating at times where you just want to quit and never want to look at your golf clubs ever again,” she typed, echoing weekend hackers and tour pros alike.
Why unpredictability fuels obsession
Spiranac zeroed in on the sport’s single most addictive trait: volatility.
“You can be standing on the first tee, do everything correctly… and you could just have the best round of your life or the worst,” she explained, adding, “It’s full of surprises but it always keeps you coming back for more.”
Psychologists call this variable-ratio reinforcement, the same mechanism slot machines weaponize. Every swing is a pull of the lever, every tee box a fresh jackpot possibility.
The sanctuary side of the driving range
When the mental weight spikes, Spiranac doesn’t flee—she grabs a 7-iron.
“There is nothing more relaxing than just going to the range, putting my music on and just beating balls for hours,” she confessed, describing a ritual familiar to anyone who has found solace in the monotonous thwack of repetitive contact.
Her routine: AirPods in, alignment sticks out, and social-media notifications silenced. The result is a moving-meditation loop where muscle memory overrides mind clutter.
Anxiety under klieg lights
Spiranac’s candor extends beyond fairway frustrations. Last month she told followers she’d stepped back from posting because “my anxiety has taken control,” producing “overthinking everything.” The admission dovetails with her open battle against severe social anxiety, a diagnosis she revealed in 2023.
Unlike anonymous patients, Spiranac copes with real-time commentary on everything from swing path to outfit choices, amplifying the stress-performance loop.
What it means for the golf-influencer economy
Spiranac’s dual role—athlete-entertainer—mirrors a booming sector where original content, not leaderboard finishes, drives revenue. Her Pro Shop partnership demands weekly posts, podcasts, and commerce drops, turning every mental-health update into brand content whether she intends it or not.
The gamble: transparency humanizes her, but it also commodifies vulnerability. Viewers engage more with authenticity, yet algorithms treat confessionals as click assets, creating a feedback loop that can re-trigger anxiety.
Big picture for weekend golfers
- Normalization: Spiranac’s platform legitimizes therapy for a demographic historically allergic to mental-health talk.
- Identity trap: Recreational players who tie self-worth to handicap now see a micro-celebrity battling the same scorecard self-flagellation.
- Coping toolkit: Range sessions, music, and deliberate unplugged practice are low-barrier tactics fans can replicate tomorrow.
Looking ahead
Sprinanac says she’ll keep posting, keep swinging, and keep paying both her therapist and her launch monitor. If the过去 is prologue, expect more unfiltered glimpses into the psychological push-pull that powers her Paige Co. enterprise—and perhaps a few 68s along the way.
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