Most golfers believe their alignment is correct. Over time, however, perception naturally adapts.
Small changes in posture, stance, grip pressure, and ball position gradually begin to feel normal. Without a visual reference, these changes can accumulate unnoticed. What once felt square continues to feel square — even if alignment has shifted.
This is not a flaw in the golfer. It is a limitation of human perception.
Alignment is external, but feel is internal. When golfers rely only on feel, they often lose awareness of how the club is actually oriented. Visual alignment restores that awareness by allowing the eyes to confirm what the body assumes.
When alignment becomes visible, golfers no longer have to guess whether the club is positioned as intended. Seeing orientation clearly replaces assumption with certainty.
