Kultida Woods Is Tiger Woods' Mother Whom He Calls a Tough Woman
Kultida Woods chose not to have a public life because of what one loses; she just wants to be herself. Tiger Woods' mom was the one to encourage him to wear red, his power color, during the final rounds of tournaments.
Tiger Woods' mom was the enforcer, the parent he feared above his dad, but Kultida Woods has a softer side. She gave 75 cents for his early tournaments -- 25 cents for a hotdog, 25c to call her, and the rest as a backup if the payphone swallowed the first quarter.
Back in 2009, she said, having lived in the U.S. for 40 years as opposed to the 25 she was in Thailand, she was more American in a sense. That said, she raised her son with all the best elements of her culture.
Kultida Woods, Tiger Woods’ mom, watches play during the first round of the 2018 Masters Tournament at Augusta National Golf Club, on April 5, 2018, in Augusta, Georgia. | Source: Getty Images
Kultida Woods Immigrated to the U.S. From Thailand to Be Earl Woods' Wife
Kultida "Tida" Punsawad was born in 1944 to a teacher and architect in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. She was the youngest of four siblings of Thai, Chinese, and Caucasian heritage, brought up as a Buddhist. Her family owned a fleet of buses, and her dad had a tin mine.
At five, her parents divorced, and she was sent to boarding school until she was ten. During her five years at boarding school, no relative visited her. Afterward, she shuttled between her father and mother, who remarried and extended their families.
Despite her rudimentary English, she became a civilian secretary at the U.S. Army base in Bangkok. Here she met Officer Earl Woods, a former baseball player of African-American, Chinese, and Native American heritage. Earl already had a family in America with Ann Hart, his wife since 1954, with whom he had three kids.
Earl Woods, father of Tiger Woods announces the new site of the $25 million Tiger Woods Learning Center, at the H.G. "Dad" Miller driving range on August 28, 2004, in Anaheim, California. | Source: Getty Images
Their
was a comedy of cultural misunderstandings. They agreed to meet at eight, he waited for Kultida late into the night, thinking she had stood him up, and she asked him why he had missed their 8 a.m. appointment the next day.
Only then did Earl learn that Thai women of her class did not go out at night. Kultida invited him to a holy day service at the Temple of the Reclining Buddha, which was their first date with a chaperone in tow.
According to one report, the officer obtained a divorce from his first wife in Mexico. Earl and Kultida married in 1969 and made their home in Brooklyn, New York, where she found work in a bank. Ann only obtained a U.S. divorce in 1972.
Tiger Woods with his parents Kultida Woods and Earl Woods at the Johnnie Walker Classic at Blue Canyon Golf Club, Thailand, on January 25, 1998. | Source: Getty Images
Kultida Woods Raised Tiger Woods in Asian Culture
After Earl retired from the Special Forces, they settled in Cypress, Orange County, which he chose for its proximity to a Navy golf course. Upon settling into the traditionally white neighborhood, they were "greeted" with a rock through the kitchen window.
According to Tiger's aunt Mai, the officer despised his wife's Thai cooking, and she had a problem with his smoking...
Kultida bestowed a unique name on her only son with Earl -- Eldrick Woods, born December 30, 1975. She wanted the child who would become world-famous with his nickname "Tiger," always to feel like his parents surrounded him. His name began with his father's initial, "E," and ended with his mother's, "K."
Tiger Woods (R) is joined by his mom Kultida Woods (2nd L), children Sam Alexis Woods and Charlie Axel Woods and girlfriend Erica Herman during his Medal of Freedom ceremony in the Rose Garden, at the White House, May 6, 2019, in Washington, DC. | Source: Getty Images
Unable to bear
per the doctors, the former secretary devoted her life to raising her son with the values of her homeland, never once hiring a babysitter. Tiger accompanied his mother on his first trip to Thailand at nine and met his grandfather, who gave him a mother-of-pearl Buddha statue he still has.
Tiger appreciates Buddhism as it is based on a "whole way of being and living," and having been raised with the best of Western and Asian elements, he revealed his preference:
"I like the Asian culture better than ours because of that. Asians are much more disciplined than we are. Look at how well-behaved their children are. It's how my mother raised me. You can question, but talk back? Never."
Elin Nordegren and Tiger Woods’ mom, Kultida Woods, look on during the 3rd round of the WGC- Accenture Match Play Championship at the La Costa Resort and Spa, on February 27, 2004, in Carlsbad, California. | Source: Getty Images
Kultida Woods Was Furious with Tiger Woods over His Cheating Scandal
The Woods remained married until Earl's death from cancer at 74. It is believed that at his May 2006 passing, Kultida lived in the home Tiger bought his parents in Tustin, Orange County. Earl had stayed in Cypress.
According to Tiger's aunt Mai, the officer despised his wife's Thai cooking, and she had a problem with his smoking, a habit he never quit despite all his medical issues. In high school, Tiger called his girlfriend in tears over his father's philandering.
This must have made his multiple counts of infidelity against his wife, Elin Nordegren, coming to light in 2010 especially tough on Kultida. Through her anger and disappointment about the pain her son brought to his family, she still defended him to the press. She insisted that her son would learn from his mistake and has a good soul.
Tiger Woods’ mom, Kultida Woods, during the World Golf Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony on March 9, 2022, in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida. | Source: Getty Images
Kultida Woods Is a Philanthropist Who Always Does What She Thinks Is Right
Growing up, her mother was also worried about what people think; even as a child, the options of others did not concern Kultida. Tiger loves his "tough" mom very much. She always tells him:
"You can't do things just to please other people. It will waste your energy, and you won't be happy in yourself. You have to do what is right for yourself. "
Tiger Woods’ mom, Kultida Woods, during the World Golf Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony on March 9, 2022, in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida. | Source: Getty Images
Tiger Woods gave his mom discretion to choose schools special to her in her home country to bequest funds from the Tiger Woods Foundation in 2009. She selected the Buddhist Girls Convent School and a home for mentally disabled kids close to her place of birth in Thailand.
An HBO documentary on the golfer revealed that his mom took his rivalry with Phil Mickelson very personally. Two sources confirmed that she called Mickelson "hefty," a body shaming play on his nickname "Lefty." She holds the late golfer Byron Nelson in high regard.