Ep. 137 – Golf Professional Chris Breed Delivers Inspiring Wisdom



In this inspiring wisdom‑conversation, I sit down with Chris Breed. He’s not only a top PGA-certified golf instructor, coach, encourager and faith‑driven leader, he is one of the most inspiring people I’ve ever met.

FACE Forward – Encouragement, Focus & Faith

We explore how Chris’ coaching insights and spiritual perspectives combine to help us live wiser, bolder lives. Chris introduces his “FACE” framework (Focus • Attitude • Commitment • Effort) and shows how it applies not only on the green, but in our everyday journeys of growth and meaning. 

You will laugh and learn with stories from his golf career, lessons in resilience and encouragement, and practical tools to help you get unstuck, shift perspective and move forward. Chris’ authenticity and positivity will leave you energized and full of confidence.

What You’ll Learn from Our Wisdom Conversation

  • Tips on how to give feedback that sticks and helps improve performance
  • Inspiration to apply when you’re feeling discouraged
  • How to find and rejuvenate our confidence when it seems to have disappeared
  • Plus – an inside look at how our faith can spill over and fuel growth in other areas of life

A Bit More About Our Wise Guest

Chris Breed is a full-time golf professional who works at Berry Hills Country Club in Charleston, West Virginia. He has a passion for growing the game of golf and watching his students’ skills grow through his instruction and guidance.

Chris loves seeing his students shine on and off the golf course. At an early age, Chris developed a passion for teaching and coaching because of the influenced of his mentor, Ted Sheftic.

Chris holds numerous PGA golf certifications. He was recently honored by Golf Digest as the #1 golf instructor in West Virginia for the 2025-2026 season.

Chris resides in Charleston with his wife and children. He joins us today from the majestic grounds of Berry Hills Country Club.


Podcast Resources

Connect with Coach Chris Breed on social media—

TikTok:  @Chris.Breed7

Instagram:  ChrisBreed85

Berry Hills Country Club website

Coach Chris Breed was referred by prior guest Sherman Lineberg (Episode 100)


Credits

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Episode Chapters

[0:01:35] – Meet Coach Chris Breed
Introduction to Chris’s personality, passion, and personal connection to Skip.

[0:03:34] – Coaching with Purpose
Chris’s coaching approach and heart for personal growth.

[0:06:25] – Golf as a Metaphor for Life
True or false questions spark deeper life wisdom through the lens of golf.

[0:08:49] – The FACE Framework
Chris shares his powerful system for performance and mindset: Focus, Attitude, Commitment, Effort.

[0:12:42] – Midnight Golf & Fatherhood
Warm memories of learning golf with his dad and how that shaped Chris’s passion.

[0:14:03] – Coaching Styles & Learning Personalities
How Chris adapts lessons to fit visual and feel-based learners.

[0:16:21] – Coach Chris Breed Reveals His “Main Thing” Wisdom
Chris shares his guiding principle in life — and how encouragement creates transformation.

[0:20:35] – Coaching His Son Riley
Lessons in expectations, patience, and the shift from “impress” to “bless.”

[0:24:46] – Faith Through TikTok
Using social platforms for spiritual encouragement and sharing daily devotions.

[0:26:37] – Anchored by Faith
Chris reflects on God’s guidance and staying grounded in turbulent times.


Episode Keywords

Wisdom, Encouragement, Faith, Coaching, Growth, Focus, Attitude, Commitment, Effort, Mindset, Transformation, Golf, Spirituality, Confidence, Resilience, Inspiration, Mentorship, Perspective, Leadership, Motivation


Episode Transcript

Announcer

(0:00) Wisdom. It’s an incredibly valuable asset. Some would say more precious than gold. It’s attractive, appealing, admirable. Conversely, a lack of wisdom is the basis of immaturity, blind spots, and bad decisions.

(0:16) Wisdom. It can be gained over time, but it can’t be rushed. But wisdom can be shared. That’s precisely what we are here to do right now today. We are here to hack wisdom to distill it, to understand it, and to process it. Why? To get better at life.

(0:35) Welcome to The Main Thing. This is your new wisdom podcast. I’m your host, Skip Lineberg, and I’ve set out to interview the wisest people I know. We’ll see what we can learn from each one when they’re faced with an incredibly difficult soul piercing question.

Skip Lineberg

(0:59) From Parkwood Studios in Charleston, West Virginia, this is The Main Thing Podcast, where we’re on a mission to help you live wiser, grow deeper, and rise above the noise of everyday life.

(1:11) I’m your host, Skip Lineberg, and I’m grateful you’ve joined me today.

(1:15) Whether you’re a returning subscriber or this is your first visit with us, I wanna start with a simple question. Consider this, who lifts your spirit when you’re discouraged? Or maybe think of it this way, who in your life helps you become the best version of yourself? 

(1:35) If someone came to mind for you just now, you are going to love today’s conversation because our guest coach Chris Breed is one of the most naturally encouraging, uplifting people I have ever met. I’m not reading hype from some press kit here. I’ve known Chris personally for six years. I’ve watched him play golf, teach golf, and coach golfers. And I’ve watched my own son walk out of a lesson with coach Chris with two things every athlete longs for, a smoother swing and a renewed sense of confidence.

(2:08) Today, you’re gonna hear the wisdom behind those gifts that Chris holds. You’ll walk away with a simple powerful framework for giving feedback that actually sticks. Tools to use when your confidence takes a hit. Fresh inspiration for those days when motivation runs dry, and an inside look at how faith, when lived authentically, naturally spills over into excellence on the course and off.

(2:38) If this is the kind of wisdom you’re hungry for, I’ll ask you for one quick favor. Tap that subscribe button wherever you’re listening.

(2:45) Now let me tell you a bit more about today’s wise guest. Chris Breed is a full time golf professional at Berry Hills Country Club here in Charleston, West Virginia. He’s passionate about growing the game of golf and even more passionate about growing the people who play it. Influenced early on by his mentor, Ted Sheftik, Chris built his life around teaching, coaching, and helping others to shine. He’s earned multiple PGA certifications, and Golf Digest magazine recently named him the number one golf instructor in West Virginia for the twenty twenty five, twenty six season.

(3:25) Chris lives in Charleston with his wife and children, and today, he joins us from the beautiful grounds of Berry Hills Country Club.

(3:34) So get ready. Over the next thirty minutes, we’re going to step into this conversation and tee up some fresh wisdom with coach Chris Breed, who’ll guide us, encourage us, and maybe even help us fix a slice or two.

Skip

(3:51) Chris Breed, so good to be with you this morning. Welcome to the Main Thing podcast.

Chris Breed

(3:55) It is great to be here. I’m excited with you, Skip.

Skip

(3:59) Chris, let’s talk to our listeners for a minute and just clear up a little mystery of how we’re connected. Of course, you coached my son, Sherman, as his golf coach right here at Berry Hills Country Club.

Chris Breed

(4:13) Yes. He he has been such a blessing. We we love to have him here at Berry Hills. And I’ve worked with Sherman for probably about two years.

(4:29) And he’s not a big kid, but he packs a lot in that punch, man. He hits it hard. I mean, we were collecting ball speeds, he was probably in the mid one seventies to almost one eighty when he was young … You know, in ninth, tenth grade. So, he is a very powerful kid, and he’s such a great kid.

Skip

(4:54) He was blessed to learn from you as his as his golf coach for several years during his junior high and high school years, Chris. And I know what a positive influence you are on all the all the athletes that you coach, and just thank you for that.

(5:07) Alright. One more connection that we have that you reminded me about off mic this morning is that we’re from the same part of the country. The the Shenandoah Valley, the quad state area there in the Martinsburg area, South Central PA.

Chris Breed

(5:27) Yep. It’s just such a beautiful rural area. I mean, my parents lived right on the Appalachian Trail in Waynesboro, and I used to hike it just about every day. I mean, it was not only a good stress relief, but it was just it was just fun to get out there.

Skip

(5:48) Chris, you’re a golf coach, and we’re here at Berry Hills Country Club where you work as a coach, instructor. I wanna start off with some true or false questions. I’ve got three of them for you.

Skip

(5:59) True or false: golf is a metaphor for life.

Chris Breed

(6:03) Yes.  True.

Skip

(6:06) Okay. Number two, true or false: golf is primarily a mental game.

Chris Breed

(6:10) Mostly true.

Skip

(6:11) Third question: most amateur players, like me, make golf harder than it needs to be.

Chris Breed

(6:18) A hundred percent true.

Skip

(6:22) Oh, cool. I appreciate it. That was fun. 

(6:25) What can golf reveal to us to help us get better at life?

Chris Breed

(6:29) Well, when I work with golfers, I work on four things. I work on their focus. What what you focus on grows.

Chris Breed

(6:40) So if you’re focused on the fairway, you’re gonna hit more fairways. If you’re focused on trying to resist something, like resist hitting a tree or resist hitting the pond. You kinda gravitate towards that. Right? So I heard something: what you resist will ultimately persist.

(7:04) So I try to really focus on targets. And attitude. So the first one is focus. The next is attitude. We must have a good attitude before, during, and after a shot.

Skip

(7:20) Yeah. I love that one.

Chris Breed

(7:22) Oh, yeah. Absolutely. And commitment. We have to be committed to the shot at hand. This is the only shot that matters. It’s not, you know, the one three holes ago. Or a big one for me would be a couple holes in advance. So it’s this shot. This is the only shot that matters.

Skip

(7:47) Yeah. And I’m thinking you led me to think right there about a hole that let’s say it’s a tricky green. Maybe it’s a two-level with a lot of break and the green’s fast, but I’m hitting my approach shot. I’m thinking about how hard that putt’s gonna be, which is, you know, one or two shots ahead, but I really ought to just be focused on hitting a good approach shot and getting it on the right part of the green.

Chris Breed

(8:07) Yeah. I mean, we all I mean, how hard is it to stay in the present moment? It’s the hardest thing in the world to do, not only in golf, but just in life. We have the past. Think about the past. And, hey, I messed up this putt two years ago. I hope I don’t mess it up again. I mean, that can happen.

(8:34) But the fourth thing that I really like to work on with my students too is effort, as well. So putting a 100% effort, physical effort into that shot. So the easiest way to remember it is face. Focus, attitude, commitment, and effort.

Chris Breed

(8:55) So we can focus on this physical face. Right? We can smile. We can frown. And we can focus on that face as well. And I think once you understand where what what your weakness is, you can you can work on that. You know, so for me, focus. So the big two for me were focus and attitude. So, an example is number 10 at Waynesboro Country Club where I’m from.

Skip

(9:28) Tell me about the hole.

Chris

(9:30) It’s about a 160 yard par three surrounded by bunkers, and there’s this one little dinky pond about 20 yards to the right of it. Okay. And it shouldn’t even be in play. And one time, I shanked it. I shanked it right into that pond. And every time I get to that hole, what do you think I focus on? I focus on ….

Skip

(9:56) That tiny pond.

Chris Breed

(9:57) Trying to not hit it into that pond. Yeah, but remember, what we try to resist is ultimately gonna … what we try to resist is going to persist. So, again, that’s why we really focus on the targets.

Skip

(10:16) Yeah. So that F-A-C-E. That’s great!

Chris Breed

(10:18) FACE. And it also helps you in life too because, right, if you focus on do you focus on positivity or negativity?

Skip

(10:26) Well, that’s a biggie.

Chris Breed

(10:27) And committing to whatever you wanna commit to. Whatever your mission is, whatever your vision is for the day, let’s commit to it. And a 100% effort into it. Right? And I think once we realize what that weakness is, man, we can our weakness can become our strength.

Skip

(10:45) Quick story. When I was when I was a teenager and growing up as a boy, I had a bit of a stuttering problem. And when I got to college, I was blessed to study under my mentor, Dr. Jack Byrd, who’s in the engineering school at WVU, West Virginia University. And he kinda spoke, hope and truth into me. And he said, “Skip, I know you. I know what’s inside you, and you’re going to overcome that stuttering problem. And in fact, you’re gonna become an excellent professional communicator.”

Chris

(11:21) It’s amazing.

Skip

(11:22) And, Chris, it changed my focus. It shifted my focus. It gave me hope. And now today, I I communicate for a living. I do a podcast. I’ve overcome the stuttering problem, and here we are. So, yeah, I I’ve lived that, and I have numerous examples of of what you talked about being a 100% bedrock truth.

Chris Breed

(11:50) 100%. Praise God.

Skip

(11:55) So when did you become passionate about golf? What what lit that fire for you?

Chris Breed

(11:59) Being around my father, really. I mean, he man, that brings back some great memories, man. And, you know, when we were younger, we used to always go go to the golf course at midnight, 01:00 in the morning. We’d drive up on the putting green and shine the lights right on the putting green. And putt till one, two o’clock in the morning. And just he would always take … there was never any pressure. It wasn’t like, “Hey, Chris, you wanna come?

It was always like, “Dad, I wanna come with you and go play golf.” And he was like, “Come on, son. Let’s go.”

Skip

(12:42) Yeah. About how old would you have been when this started?

Chris Breed

(12:44) Six, seven years old. I mean, I started at such a young age, and I think that’s why I love it so much.

Skip

(12:54) Was he a good player also?

Chris Breed

(12:55) He was. He he was a very good player, and he was a golf professional as well. He was at Tygart Lake for a couple years, then at Clarksburg Country Club for a couple years. So he was there till the till about the mid eighties, nineties.

(13:13) And another one that was great near and dear to my heart is we used to take a bucket of balls. And in the middle of the wintertime, we used to go to Number 12 at Waynesboro Country Club, a little par five right on the road there. We used to I used to take a shovel and shovel out a little area and just hit balls.

My dad would be out there about sixty, seventy yards. I would hit, like, little wedges to him, he’d catch him with a glove and walk it back over through the snow. And yeah, it just it was those those types of stories, man. They’ll live on forever in my head. I’m just so grateful for those experiences with him.

Chris Breed

(14:03) Another thing that I enjoy about teaching too is just understanding their personalities.  Getting to know them, not only what their tendencies are, but just getting to know them as a human. It’s so cool to to see because so many people are feel players. Some people are visuals. I work … a lot of kids that I work with … they’re visual learners. Just seeing …. An  illustration that I use is: Hey, what’s your favorite color? “Blue.” Do you like water balloons? “Yeah.” 

(14:40) And then I put my hand up here and I say, pretend like that’s a water balloon. And I want you to hit that ball right through that water balloon and make it splash. Right? So that’s a visual type of learner. They they use their athletic ability to visualize and then trust the shot and just and just let it go. So it’s fun learning those personalities.

(15:01) And sometimes it’s like trial and error. Hey, this didn’t work. And I know you’re a visual learner. Let me try this. And just understanding how they learn. And once one thing clicks, man, it’s fun to watch them just shine.

Announcer

(15:21) One nine two. One hundred ninety two extra minutes of wisdom. That’s what you get when you become a patron of the main thing podcast. Many of you continue to say, we want to hear more from these wise guests. That’s precisely what patrons of our podcast get. Exclusive access to bonus episodes called “The Whole Thing.” These 30-minute special shows bring you a deeper dive into our guest’s wisdom. Less editing, more laughter. Less time limits, more stories.

Unlock those 192 of wisdom for yourself for as little as $9 per month through the Patreon platform. And when you become a patron, you also get access to wisdom essays, behind the scenes glimpses, and access to special patron only wisdom gatherings. Head over to patreon.com/the main thing podcast. Go unlock your one hundred ninety two extra minutes of wisdom.

Skip

(16:21) Chris Breed, what’s the main thing you’ve learned in your lifetime so far?

Chris Breed

(16:26) Skip, the main thing that I have learned so far is to be an encouragement to others.

Skip

(16:34) Oh, I love that. I love that. That brings joy to my heart and a smile to my face, because I I know how important that is, and I try to live that way. And I love being around encouragers. Take us a little deeper inside that, Chris, and unpack that wisdom for us.

Chris Breed

(16:56) So in this world, right, we’re we all have stresses. We all have worries. And we all have anxieties. We all have doubts. We all have mishits. But when we encourage, that may be all that someone needs to see the love of Jesus. And, you know, being a parent, being a golf instructor, being a father, being a son, and just being a child of God, we’re all called to just be fishermen of men. Fishermen of women, fishermen of men. That encouragement is … is just life for someone. 

(17:47) And and even there’s times where I have to speak that life into myself too. And when when I’m able to do that, my wife and my kids, man, they mean everything to me, and I know yours mean everything to you as well. And just bearing that image of being a child of God.

(18:10) And and just if you’re kind to someone and you even even the power of a smile. And someone that serves you as a waitress and you write down a bible verse or just say, Jesus loves you. And then you walk away, and when you turn around and you look at their face. Sometimes it’s all they need to be like, man, I needed that today.

Skip

(18:41) And I can keep going now.

Chris Breed

(18:43) Now I can keep going. Yeah. And that’s, I think, that’s just the power of encouragement.

Skip

(18:51) You know, a single candle can light up a whole dark room and nothing, you know, nothing can extinguish that light.

Chris Breed

(18:56) You’re sending goosebumps down my spine right now because one of those moments. One of those moments when I was with my dad on the putting green. It was 02:00 in the morning. And one night, we we pulled up at the golf course at Waynesboro. There’s a little hill, and you look down the hill onto the putting green. 

(19:24) The “V” in the headlights formed … it formed a “V” right at the hole. And it usually lights up the whole putting green, so it was a little unusual. He said, “Son, I want you to pay attention for a second.” He said, “If you if you follow the light, if you follow Jesus and you follow that light, the darkness will be extinguished by the light.”

(19:51) And my dad, man, he he always could hit you right in the chest with little comments like that. And it’s like, yeah, I see what you’re saying: there’s gonna be stresses; there’s gonna be doubts; there’s gonna be critics; and there’s gonna be there’s gonna be discouragements that come in your way. But just keep your eyes on the light.

Skip

(20:17) Chris, I wonder if you would share with our our listeners a recent personal example when you had to lean on your main thing, you know, whether it was a challenge or a personal situation where you had to remind yourself that, hey, I want … I need … to be an encourager to others?

Chris Breed

(20:35) There’s so many of them. But one of them, I would say, encouraging my son, Riley. He’s just started playing golf just at the beginning of the summer.

Skip

(20:53) How old?

Chris Breed

(20:54) He’s 15 years old now. He’s a tenth grader at GW. Just started on the golf team, and he just got hooked on it. And I think he he started getting a little bit frustrated just because he wasn’t picking it up right away.

(21:11) And I said, what’s what’s getting you a little bit? And he goes, “Well, you know, you’re my dad. You’re a golf golf instructor. I get to play at Barry Hills all the time. I was just expecting to be really good at this time.”

(21:27) And and I understand that, you know, when we try to when we try to impress someone it can cause a lot of stress. Right? And I heard one of the best quotes: When you focus on wanting to bless rather than impress, you have nothing to stress.

(21:49) And that just kinda hit me because when I was younger, you know, you would always hear things like, “Hey, you know, Chris is playing in a tournament. He’s a good golfer. He’s probably gonna win. He could possibly win it.” And it caused a lot of stress because I had to try to impress. 

(22:07) But my whole theory now is wanting to bless. So when I hit a bad shot, right, you’re trying to bless them with a reaction. Instead of, “Man, Chris can hit the ball great.” Now, it could be: “Hey, Chris hit some pretty bad shots, but did you see how he reacted to that? Man, he smiled.” You just let it go.

(22:32) With Riley just saying, “Just stick into it, man. It’ll click. You just gotta stay patient, keep grinding, and keep going. One shot at a time.”

Skip

(22:44) Chris, if someone out there hasn’t really embraced your your main thing, so they’re not living in a way to be an encourager to others, what are some pain points that they might be running into repeatedly?

Chris Breed

(22:56) The pain points you’re gonna you’re gonna feel is just discouragement. And, you know, we just we just wanna keep that track … one track at a time, one step at a time, and you’re gonna have some stresses. You’re gonna have some discouragements. So just encourage yourself and and stay motivated to it.

Chris Breed

(23:21) You know, I wake up in the morning, and as soon as my eyeballs open, I say, Lord, thank you. Thank you for another day. Thank you for blessing me for with my with my wife and kids. And and I just try to I flood my mind with with all the things that I’m grateful for.

(23:43) And I ask myself, what can I do, Lord? What can I do to encourage another person? It doesn’t have to be everybody, but it can just be one person. But I try to do it. I try to encourage everybody. But, you know, I need to encourage as well sometimes because, you know, we all we all get down on ourselves.

Skip

(24:10) Chris, you have a wonderful I’m gonna call this a ministry on TikTok. Just about every day, you’ll publish, I’ll call it a devotion. You’re sharing your heart. Typically, you have a scripture on your heart. You’re talking into the camera, and you’re illustrating how that is shaping your life, how we can apply that wisdom from that scripture to deal with something. I just I’m curious when you started doing that, what led you to the concept of sharing a scripture and a devotion every day on TikTok?

Chris Breed

(24:46) A couple years ago, I’m a member at Bible Center Church. And we were doing a  … one of the sermons was on Matthew 4:19, which is being fishermen to men. And that’s really all that it is.

(25:07) And I know how TikTok, you know, Instagram, a lot of my friends, and people I don’t even know are on TikTok, Instagram, Facebook, things like that. And anything we’re all here on a mission. We’re all here to … it’s not about me. It’s about Jesus, and it’s about spreading spreading that.

(25:34) And if I can spread it on TikTok and someone responds to me saying, Chris, I really needed that today. That’s what keeps me going. It’s like when you get a response like that, I’ve been dealing with some issues for the last couple months, and I needed to hear this today. Right there, it was like, hey, I’ve got your back, but most importantly, God’s got your back.

Skip

(26:04) Yeah. You’re being an encourager.

Chris Breed

(26:06) Yeah. We all need fed the word, but the younger generation, man, it’s it’s there’s a lot of stresses. There’s a lot of a lot of things going on, a lot of things that everybody deals with.  And if they can hear a message from me, like I said, if it’s just that one person that needs to hear I’m gonna keep doing it.

Skip

(26:27) Chris, I wanna wrap up with this question: Where would you be without your faith Where without God’s love, guidance, and provision, where where would you be?

Chris Breed

(26:37) Without his faith, without God’s love, without God’s his love, what he’s done for me, what he’s done for you, what he’s done for my kids. What he’s done for my wife, everybody here on this earth, man, we’d be without without it. I mean, we would be we would be hopeless.

Skip

(27:02) Hopeless. Exactly. You took the word right out of my brain.

Chris Breed

(27:06) And we’d be fearful and just stressed at all times. because stresses will hit us all different ways. And there’s a scripture in first Peter five. He says, Satan is like a roaring lion

Skip

(27:25) Yeah. Prowling about.

Chris Breed

(27:26) Seeking to devour. But Peter tells us to stand firm in our faith. So I do everything I can. You can hear that lion roaring everywhere you go. But I always envision God placing a leash right around this lion’s neck, and he staked that leash so far down in that ground that all this lion can do is just walk around in a little three foot circle. And if you don’t get in that circle, we can’t touch you. And God’s holding on to that leash.

Skip

(28:04) Chris, I have enjoyed this so much. I’m so encouraged. I’m so energized by our conversation. I just want to give you a moment here at the end to speak to our audience of about a thousand listeners.

Chris Breed

(28:14) Everything you do, visualize success. Trust that it can be done and put the past in the past. The past is in the past. Focus on the future. Focus on the here and the now.

Skip

(28:33) Yeah. What’s right in front of your face: F-A-C-E.

Chris Breed

(28:38) F -A-C-E.

Skip

(28:40) Chris, thank you so much. This has been a blessing. This has been a true learning experience, and I can’t thank you enough.

(28:47) So long for now.

Chris Breed

(28:48) Yep. So long.

Announcer

(28:50) That goes by incredibly fast, doesn’t it? Time flies when you’re hacking wisdom.

(28:55) Thank you for listening to this wisdom conversation. Let’s give a big hearty thank you to the crew of the Main Thing Podcast. These are the folks who truly keep the wisdom pipeline flowing.

(29:06) Audio engineer, Bob Hotchkiss. Strategy adviser, Andy Malinoski. Public relations and partnerships guru, Rachel Bell. Social media and digital marketing expert, Chloe Lineberg. Graphic designer, Emma Malinoski, and, of course, our patrons. Those generous folks who provide monthly funding support to help underwrite our cost of production. I couldn’t do it without you, nor would I want to.

(29:33) Your feedback matters a lot. If you have a question, a suggestion, maybe an idea, or even a nomination of a future show guest, I’d love to hear from you. Email me at info at the main thing podcast dot com.

(29:47) Well, that’s a wrap for this show. I’m your host, Skip Lineberg, signing off for now and inviting you to join us again next time for another special delivery of wisdom.


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