He has had a few goes at it recently, but New Zealand opening batsman Martin Guptill finally thinks he is learning the mental skills required to convert his promising starts into big scores.
Unfortunately for him and New Zealand yesterday, Guptill was speaking after being dismissed following a promising start - for the third consecutive time.
It was a familiar demise for him, and his teammates also reverted to recent type, with poor decision-making again plaguing them on the first day of the second test against the West Indies at Sabina Park in Kingston, Jamaica.
After being sent in, Guptill scored his third consecutive half-century but was run out on 71, and skipper Ross Taylor was loose in being dismissed for 60 after showing he was in good touch. Down the order, Neil Wagner, Tim Southee and Trent Boult blazed away - recklessly some might say - and the Kiwis were bowled out for 260, the West Indies' dangerous opening pair of Chris Gayle and Kieran Powell safely negotiating five overs before stumps to finish on 11 without loss in reply.
"It's always nice scoring a few runs but I want more than that. Sixties, 70s, 90s aren't good enough. If we want to succeed as a team we need hundreds," said Guptill after being dismissed for 97 and 67 in the first test in Antigua, a match which resulted in a nine-wicket drubbing for the Black Caps.