Yesterday I finished a book I’ve been working on for two and a half years—a sequel to A Man at Arms (2021). I sent the manuscript off to my agent and to some friends who have a movie option on the previous book.
At the same time, I’m watching the Masters golf championship on TV (it’s Sunday about noon as I’m writing this.)

Magnolia Lane at the Masters
When the Masters finishes a few hours from now, there’ll be a hard number on the leaderboard. Someone will have shot the lowest score. That player will have “won.” There’ll be applause and emotion and a big, big check. The victory will change the player’s life.
That’s not how it works for you and me as writers and artists. Our work doesn’t produce a number. It can’t be judged objectively.
Our leaderboard is inside our own head. We and we alone determine how we played the game.
Was the project worthy of us? Was it ours alone, in the sense that we were writing from our own gift … and in the face of our own fears? Did we live up to the goddess’s expectations of us? Did we live up to our own? Did we give it all we had?
There are no spotlights in the writer’s life. There’s no moment of acclamation as we tap in a putt on the 72nd green. Our moment is private. When I wrap a book, a lot of times I won’t even tell anybody.
This is self-evaluation. Self-reinforcement. Self-validation.
Some of the players at Augusta didn’t make the cut. Others performed below their expectations of themselves. They will do, tonight and tomorrow, exactly what you and I do. In the private precincts of their own hearts, they’ll ask themselves the same questions we ask ourselves.
Did I give it my all? Did I play my own game? Was I true to my love of the sport?
They will self-evaluate. They will self-reinforce. They will self-validate.
Then they’ll get ready for next week. They’ll re-set their intentions, knowing that this is the life they have chosen and they would not have it any other way. They’ll reinforce their own gratitude that they get the chance to play the game. “Start the next one today,” my old friend and mentor Paul Rink once told me.
I have. I’m about sixty pages into the next book. I won’t judge this latest one any longer. I release it.
“Start the next one today.”
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Finishing first appeared on
Steven Pressfield.