Sarah Lewis: Embrace the near win

7

I feel so fortunate that my first job

was working at the Museum of Modern Art

on a retrospective of painter Elizabeth Murray.

I learned so much from her.

After the curator Robert Storr

selected all the paintings

from her lifetime body of work,

I loved looking at the paintings from the 1970s.

There were some motifs and elements

that would come up again later in her life.

I remember asking her

what she thought of those early works.

If you didn't know they were hers,

you might not have been able to guess.

She told me that a few didn't quite meet

her own mark for what she wanted them to be.

One of the works, in fact,

so didn't meet her mark,

she had set it out in the trash in her studio,

and her neighbor had taken it

because she saw its value.

In that moment, my view of success

and creativity changed.

I realized that success is a moment,

but what we're always celebrating

is creativity and mastery.

But this is the thing: What gets us to convert success

into mastery?

This is a question I've long asked myself.

I think it comes when we start to value

the gift of a near win.

I started to understand this when I went

on one cold May day

to watch a set of varsity archers,

all women as fate would have it,

at the northern tip of Manhattan

at Columbia's Baker Athletics Complex.

I wanted to see what's called archer's paradox,

the idea that in order to actually hit your target,

you have to aim at something slightly skew from it.

I stood and watched as the coach

drove up these women in this gray van,

and they exited with this kind of relaxed focus.

One held a half-eaten ice cream cone in one hand

and arrows in the left with yellow fletching.

And they passed me and smiled,

but they sized me up as they

made their way to the turf,

and spoke to each other not with words

but with numbers, degrees, I thought,

positions for how they might plan

to hit their target.

I stood behind one archer as her coach

stood in between us to maybe assess

who might need support, and watched her,

and I didn't understand how even one

was going to hit the ten ring.

The ten ring from the standard 75-yard distance,

it looks as small as a matchstick tip

held out at arm's length.

And this is while holding 50 pounds of draw weight

on each shot.

She first hit a seven, I remember, and then a nine,

and then two tens,

and then the next arrow

didn't even hit the target.

And I saw that gave her more tenacity,

and she went after it again and again.

For three hours this went on.

At the end of the practice, one of the archers

was so taxed that she lied out on the ground

just star-fished,

her head looking up at the sky,

trying to find what T.S. Eliot might call

that still point of the turning world.

It's so rare in American culture,

there's so little that's vocational about it anymore,

to look at what doggedness looks like

with this level of exactitude,

what it means to align your body posture

for three hours in order to hit a target,

pursuing a kind of excellence in obscurity.

But I stayed because I realized I was witnessing

what's so rare to glimpse,

that difference between success and mastery.

So success is hitting that ten ring,

but mastery is knowing that it means nothing

if you can't do it again and again.

Mastery is not just the same as excellence, though.

It's not the same as success,

which I see as an event,

a moment in time,

and a label that the world confers upon you.

Mastery is not a commitment to a goal

but to a constant pursuit.

What gets us to do this,

what get us to forward thrust more

is to value the near win.

How many times have we designated something

a classic, a masterpiece even,

while its creator considers it hopelessly unfinished,

riddled with difficulties and flaws,

in other words, a near win?

Elizabeth Murray surprised me

with her admission about her earlier paintings.

Painter Paulzanne so often thought his works were incomplete

that he would deliberately leave them aside

with the intention of picking them back up again,

but at the end of his life,

the result was that he had only signed

10 percent of his paintings.

His favorite novel was "The [Unknown] Masterpiece" by Honoré de Balzac,

and he felt the protagonist was the painter himself.

Franz Kafka saw incompletion

when others would find only works to praise,

so much so that he wanted all of his diaries,

manuscripts, letters and even sketches

burned upon his death.

His friend refused to honor the request,

and because of that, we now have all the works

we now do by Kafka:

"America," "The Trial" and "The Castle,"

a work so incomplete it even stops mid-sentence.

The pursuit of mastery, in other words,

is an ever-onward almost.

"Lord, grant that I desire

more than I can accomplish,"

Michelangelo implored,

as if to that Old Testament God on the Sistine Chapel,

and he himself was that Adam

with his finger outstretched

and not quite touching that God's hand.

Mastery is in the reaching, not the arriving.

It's in constantly wanting to close that gap

between where you are and where you want to be.

Mastery is about sacrificing for your craft

and not for the sake of crafting your career.

How many inventors and untold entrepreneurs

live out this phenomenon?

We see it even in the life

of the indomitable Arctic explorer Ben Saunders,

who tells me that his triumphs

are not merely the result

of a grand achievement,

but of the propulsion of a lineage of near wins.

We thrive when we stay at our own leading edge.

It's a wisdom understood by Duke Ellington,

who said that his favorite song out of his repertoire

was always the next one,

always the one he had yet to compose.

Part of the reason that the near win

is inbuilt to mastery

is because the greater our proficiency,

the more clearly we might see

that we don't know all that we thought we did.

It's called the DunningKruger effect.

The Paris Review got it out of James Baldwin

when they asked him,

"What do you think increases with knowledge?"

and he said, "You learn how little you know."

Success motivates us, but a near win

can propel us in an ongoing quest.

One of the most vivid examples of this comes

when we look at the difference

between Olympic silver medalists

and bronze medalists after a competition.

Thomas Gilovich and his team from Cornell

studied this difference and found

that the frustration silver medalists feel

compared to bronze, who are typically a bit

more happy to have just not received fourth place

and not medaled at all,

gives silver medalists a focus

on follow-up competition.

We see it even in the gambling industry

that once picked up on this phenomenon

of the near win

and created these scratch-off tickets

that had a higher than average rate of near wins

and so compelled people to buy more tickets

that they were called heart-stoppers,

and were set on a gambling industry set of abuses

in Britain in the 1970s.

The reason the near win has a propulsion

is because it changes our view of the landscape

and puts our goals, which we tend to put

at a distance, into more proximate vicinity

to where we stand.

If I ask you to envision what a great day looks like next week,

you might describe it in more general terms.

But if I ask you to describe a great day at TED tomorrow,

you might describe it with granular, practical clarity.

And this is what a near win does.

It gets us to focus on what, right now,

we plan to do to address that mountain in our sights.

It's Jackie Joyner-Kersee, who in 1984

missed taking the gold in the heptathlon

by one third of a second,

and her husband predicted that would give her

the tenacity she needed in follow-up competition.

In 1988, she won the gold in the heptathlon

and set a record of 7,291 points,

a score that no athlete has come very close to since.

We thrive not when we've done it all,

but when we still have more to do.

I stand here thinking and wondering

about all the different ways

that we might even manufacture a near win

in this room,

how your lives might play this out,

because I think on some gut level we do know this.

We know that we thrive when we stay

at our own leading edge,

and it's why the deliberate incomplete

is inbuilt into creation myths.

In Navajo culture, some craftsmen and women

would deliberately put an imperfection

in textiles and ceramics.

It's what's called a spirit line,

a deliberate flaw in the pattern

to give the weaver or maker a way out,

but also a reason to continue making work.

Masters are not experts because they take

a subject to its conceptual end.

They're masters because they realize

that there isn't one.

Now it occurred to me, as I thought about this,

why the archery coach

told me at the end of that practice,

out of earshot of his archers,

that he and his colleagues never feel

they can do enough for their team,

never feel there are enough visualization techniques

and posture drills to help them overcome

those constant near wins.

It didn't sound like a complaint, exactly,

but just a way to let me know,

a kind of tender admission,

to remind me that he knew he was giving himself over

to a voracious, unfinished path

that always required more.

We build out of the unfinished idea,

even if that idea is our former self.

This is the dynamic of mastery.

Coming close to what you thought you wanted

can help you attain more than you ever dreamed

you could.

It's what I have to imagine Elizabeth Murray

was thinking when I saw her smiling

at those early paintings one day

in the galleries.

Even if we created utopias, I believe

we would still have the incomplete.

Completion is a goal,

but we hope it is never the end.

Thank you.

(Applause)