She giggled and said, "Oh I know the bartender, he would have tabbed it for me."

probably better that I didn't know that at the time.

Edit: Yes we are still married.
Greg, you have a brilliant and special lady!
A quick bit of old fart bragging. I hadn't shot a pistol in a year. Not in practice, not in competition. Fat fingered a shot I fired when I knew the sights had dropped into the nine ring, still a 599 and a win. The next year was the same thing, first time I picked up a gun in a year, a 600 and a win. My proudest performance at anything was the first 600 shot at that range a few years before, after fifteen years of very skilled shooters including masters, grandmasters, and a true legend trying. There had been dozens of 598's and 599's shot, a couple dozen people that could shoot clean once the pressure of perfect was off. I suspect that over a dozen better shooters than I was had shot before me. However, I had over twenty years of competition behind me and I might have been the best competitor. I was certainly head to head with the elite.
I had shot on plenty of perfect days and nights, the night I shot the first perfect score the weather sucked. A rain and wind squall, We were soaked, targets blowing over or completely away. Halfway through the match I realized that I was past the toughest stage for me, still clean. I decided then I was shooting a six hundred that night.
Mental toughness is the name of the game. What is going to happen if you lose? When you realize not a whole lot of anything, the pressure eases. I can't operate without mild pressure, the trick is knowing the emotional temperature you need to function at your best and how to get there. For me it is as simple as breathing. Fast and shallow to up my emotional temperature, slow and deep to lower it.
Final tip hang with the winners, stay away from the losers. I make a quick pass to read the room after that I stay away from those not trying to win. If it isn't convenient to hang with the winners, I stay alone. I don't want to listen to a bunch of negatives.
My opinion, "The Pleasure of Small Motions" second edition, dwells too much on not losing, not enough on winning. There is a difference. I understand the first edition was much thinner, I suspect a much better book.
Hu