A story about timing, nervous system state, and one public golf moment that made us pay attention.
"One year ago today, I showed my VibroConnect chairs in public for the very first time at the Greater Milwaukee Golf Show. That same Sunday, a friend sent me a link. A PGA Tour pro had publicly described using a frequency chair during a rain delay. Three months later, he won the US Open.
I'm not saying one caused the other. I am saying the timing made me pay attention."
For the first time ever, Mike Thompson brings his VibroConnect chairs — invented and manufactured by him — to the Greater Milwaukee Golf Show. The booth is later named one of the top 3 exhibits out of nearly 100 vendors by Wisconsin.golf journalist Gary D'Amato.
During a rain delay at The Players Championship, PGA Tour pro JJ Spaun publicly describes using a specialized chair session involving frequencies, magnets, vibration, a headset, and an eye mask. After the delay, he finishes strong and forces a playoff with Rory McIlroy.
What did JJ Spaun do in rain delay?
— Jamie Kennedy (@jamierkennedy) March 16, 2025
Not sure I would have guessed this 😂 pic.twitter.com/YApu7SiIij
Public interview embed shown for commentary and discussion only.
Mike Thompson comes home from the golf show and a friend sends him the link. He had just spent the weekend showing the public a similar category of nervous-system-based chair technology. Seeing a PGA Tour player describe a related experience on national television, on the same weekend, felt like more than random timing.
Three months after that public interview during The Players Championship, JJ Spaun wins the 2025 U.S. Open at Oakmont — one of the most demanding setups in major championship golf. We are not saying the chair session caused the win. We are saying the sequence raises an interesting question about what role nervous system state may play in performance under pressure.
One year to the day from the golf show debut and the JJ Spaun link, NeuroGolf® Rx launches its updated website with nervous-system technology at its core. Whether results show up immediately or later, the underlying idea remains the same: train the system that drives everything else.
The nervous system does not always respond like a light switch. Focus work, brainwave training, chair-based sensory input, and neurological rehearsal may influence patterns below the surface before the effects are obvious in performance. Sometimes change shows up later — in a tournament round, in a calmer mind, or in better decision-making under pressure.
That does not prove cause and effect. But it helps explain why people often talk about a session first — and a result later.
Different people. Different tools. Different timelines. Same basic question: what happens when the nervous system is better prepared?
"It's a little intense. You feel like you're in a rocketship taking off."
"57 years of golf. Never a hole in one. 2 months after the pod — my first ever. Then 4 more."
"Post neck fusion surgery. Best golf season of my life. Broke 70 for the first time ever."
"I shot a 2-over 38 for nine holes — my best score of the year." Skeptical journalist, same-day result.
"We are not promising miracles. We are inviting you to experience a different approach — one built around the nervous system."