"If you don't enjoy it, then putting in the long hours is going to take their toll. If you don't enjoy it, then putting in the long hours is going to take their toll"
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Webb’s repetition lands like the grind itself: the same sentence, again, because that’s what long hours feel like when the joy is gone. As an athlete, she’s not selling a cute “do what you love” poster; she’s issuing a practical warning from inside a culture that fetishizes sacrifice. The wording is blunt and bodily. “Take their toll” isn’t metaphorical flair - it’s sleep debt, overuse injuries, narrowed social life, the quiet erosion of confidence when progress stalls. Enjoyment, in her framing, isn’t a bonus. It’s a protective factor.
The intent is less motivational than diagnostic. If you can’t locate genuine pleasure in the process - not just in winning, but in practice, repetition, small improvements - then the math of elite performance turns ugly. Hours are neutral; they only become “work ethic” after the fact. Without enjoyment, they’re just extraction.
Subtextually, Webb pushes back on the macho mythology that suffering is proof of seriousness. Golf especially is a sport where the labor is invisible to fans: endless range sessions, short-game drills, mental rehearsal, travel. Her line pulls the curtain back and reframes commitment as a sustainable relationship with the craft, not a martyrdom contest.
Context matters: Webb’s era professionalized women’s golf in ways that demanded more training, more media, more constant optimization. In that environment, enjoyment becomes a kind of autonomy. It’s the difference between choosing the hard thing and being consumed by it.
The intent is less motivational than diagnostic. If you can’t locate genuine pleasure in the process - not just in winning, but in practice, repetition, small improvements - then the math of elite performance turns ugly. Hours are neutral; they only become “work ethic” after the fact. Without enjoyment, they’re just extraction.
Subtextually, Webb pushes back on the macho mythology that suffering is proof of seriousness. Golf especially is a sport where the labor is invisible to fans: endless range sessions, short-game drills, mental rehearsal, travel. Her line pulls the curtain back and reframes commitment as a sustainable relationship with the craft, not a martyrdom contest.
Context matters: Webb’s era professionalized women’s golf in ways that demanded more training, more media, more constant optimization. In that environment, enjoyment becomes a kind of autonomy. It’s the difference between choosing the hard thing and being consumed by it.
Quote Details
| Topic | Work-Life Balance |
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