Tiger Woods is reeling - on and off the golf  course.
Nearly a year after the Thanksgiving car crash that  exposed his affair with Rachel  Uchitel and later countless others, the golfer is opening up to 
Newsweek.
"Last  November, everything I thought I knew about myself changed abruptly,  and what others perceived about me shifted, too," Woods writes in an essay.
For Tiger Woods (and THG), life changed  forever that night.
Last Thanksgiving night, the golfer drove  his Escalade into a fire hydrant outside the home he shared with wife Elin  Nordegren and their two young children.
Later, we learned he  and Elin were arguing over his affair with Uchitel. It was just the  beginning of one of the biggest sex scandals in history unraveling.
Woods  writes: "I had been conducting my personal life in an artificial way,  detached from values my upbringing had taught, and I should have  embraced."
"The physical pain from that car accident has long  healed. But the pain in my soul is more complex and unsettling; it has  been far more difficult to ease - and to understand. But this much is  obvious now: my life was out of balance."
"My  priorities were out of order. I made terrible choices and repeated  mistakes. I hurt the people whom I loved the most. And even beyond  accepting the consequences and responsibility, there is the ongoing  struggle to learn from my failings."
He and Elin finalized  their divorce this August.
Expressing new appreciation for  fatherhood and life in general, he adds: "Slowly, I'm regaining the  balance that I'd lost. My healing process is far from complete."
"I  am beginning to appreciate things I overlooked before. Some victories  can mean smiles, not trophies, and that life's most ordinary events can  bring joy. Giving my son, Charlie, a bath, for example, beats chipping  another bucket of balls."
"Making mac and cheese for him and his  sister, Sam, is better than any restaurant. Sharing a laugh watching  cartoons or reading a book beats channel-surfing alone. Some nights,  it's just me and the kids, an experience that's both trying and  rewarding. Probably like the experience a lot of families have every  evening around the world."
It's hard to say from our perspective,  but here's hoping Tiger truly is humbled by all he's been through,  becomes a better person for it, and comes back better than ever. He  didn't win a tournament in 2010. We wouldn't bet against him next year.