Spuzz
Yep!
I've always tried to keep the simplest part of the game simple. Doesn't take any athleticism... not that mechanics don't apply, but it's the one area of the game where a player can deviate from the norm and develop a reliable technique... it just requires developing pace and feel, and learning how to read breaking putts, and too - realizing that how firmly we stroke the ball with the putter ultimately determines the break. Just takes a little effort to develop.
I'm lucky, I guess, that putting just came second nature for me. Don't need a line on the ball, not worried about mechanics that much. I see it as the simplest part of the game and there's no need for me personally to get bogged down with anything other than rolling the ball over a spot on the green at the right amount of pace.
I've done alright in that aspect of the game, thank goodness. I see guys struggle on the greens and yet see how reasonably good they are with the other aspects, and I think to myself, "man... if this guy could only putt halfway decent."
I think people just get so consumed with being perfect that they forget that too much attention to detail and focus only adds tension, and being tense seldom yields a desirable outcome. No matter which club they use, but especially on the greens. I've been playing close to 30 years and I've yet to see a playing partner who spends too much time thinking about the upcoming shot or stroke remotely happy with the result.