In a small studio, Mia mounted a pegboard near the entry and slid a roll-up mat behind a mirror. Her pop-up net lived under the bed. Because setup took under two minutes, she practiced nightly, logged ten putts per station, and shaved three strokes within a month.
After a baby arrived, Tariq swapped long sessions for micro-drills and a telescopic trainer kept in the nursery closet. He rehearsed tempo during naps, chipping foam balls into a laundry basket. Flexibility beat perfection, and his handicap held steady despite fewer rounds, preserving confidence when weekends returned.
Three roommates shared a hallway and thin walls, so they used soft balls, a felt landing pad, and a pop-up net with extra weights. A simple agreement—no swings after 9 p.m.—kept peace. Their weekly challenge night turned practice into a game, motivating everyone to show up.