Pip: There’s a golf course on Miami Street where the dandelions know something about growing up. Nathaniel Paul Hoff put it into a poem, and here we are.
Mara: Today we’re looking at a piece that uses a place — a real, named municipal golf course — to talk about how games, fathers, and greens teach us something that has nothing to do with scorecards.
Pip: Let’s start with the course itself.
The Course Where I Grew Up
Mara: The poem opens in a specific geography — Miami Street, an old bookstore nearby, a city golf course called Erskine — and the specificity is doing real work before the bigger claim arrives.
Pip: And the bigger claim lands plainly. The poem reads: “I learned to grow up on these hills / These greens / Taught me how to be a man / To be polite.”
Mara: So the upshot is that the golf course is not backdrop — it’s curriculum. Politeness, presence, the shape of a person: all of it traced back to a place most people would drive past without a second look.
Pip: The poem earns that claim by being honest about the game first. “The idea so simple yet execution endlessly imperfect” — that’s golf, yes, but it’s also a pretty clean description of trying to be a decent human being.
Mara: What the poem does well is hold two timescales at once. There’s the seasonal — dandelion haze slipping into summer heat — and then there’s the generational. Time on the course is described as “on repeat,” but the memories kept from discarded scorecards are anything but disposable.
Pip: The father is present without being named as a lesson. He’s just there, and the speaker learned something by being alongside him. That restraint is doing a lot.
Mara: The closing lines pull the whole thing into focus: “a game can teach us / A lot more than how to swing / But rather how to live and be present / In a world that just keeps falling away.” The falling away is what gives the presence its weight.
Pip: A poem about golf that turns out to be about attention. That’s the move.
Mara: Place as teacher, presence as practice — it’s a quiet argument, but it holds.
Pip: Next time, we’ll see what other ordinary ground the site finds worth standing on.