This is a cautionary tale.
After 1,600 hours and 1,850 landings I ran my M20J off the runway into a field this weekend. Had the field not been muddy, well, only my ego would have been bruised. But when I had slowed to a few miles per hour there was enough weight on the nosewheel that it buried itself in the mud, which produced a prop strike. No engine stoppage but, of course, that doesn't matter.
I decided at the last moment to land at the airport and, so, used my speed brakes to descend (I hate using those things because it seems like such inefficient, ill-planned flying and, so, almost never deploy them) and was so focused on dumping them before really setting up for a long straight in approach that I forgot about those things called flaps (my routine is to deploy the first notch at 1K AGL). Rather than toggling the flap button I punched the speed brake button, so at least I did something at 1K!! I was higher and faster than I should have been for a 2,500 runway but, hey, the sight picture was one I'd seen before and handled without any trouble. But, of course, that picture was formed from landings with full flaps, probably with something of a headwind (on this day it was calm with, perhaps, a slight tailwind) and with an aircraft probably 400 pounds heavier than was the case yesterday.
This experience has also caused me to realize how thoroughly I've disregarded the advice we all read from time to time, which is to be "primed" for a go round. In those 1850 landings I can only recall 4 go rounds. That means I've saved a lot of landings I shouldn't have. Which gave me the confidence I could save this one. The only thing I've been "primed" to do is land.
So no more. Good enough isn't. If there isn't enough margin to handle the mistakes I may have made, then I'm going around. Of course, to be sure this gets etched into my brain, I've now got a couple of months to stew on those mistakes. The good news is I'm awfully lucky to have had this experience at a flat, sea level airport rather than, say, Sedona.
If there are any of you out there who may have mimicked my bad behavior, well, please consider the possible consequences.