I get what your saying, but let's not kid ourselves...Our "heat of battle" at flight safety is just a tad bit different, even if your doing a .297 then Serenity qualifying on the boat.
In all seriousness though, the principals are the same.
I flew a CJ3 single pilot for years before transitioning to a multi crew large cabin business jet. Best advice I ever get was a captain telling me how sharp I was and how welll I knew the airplane, but doing things "my" way and doing things for speed wasn't going to impress anyone, in fact it would piss them off. Do what you have to do to pass but don't be a know it all and write your own rules. Without fail, every trip to the school house we all end up meeting some dude that decides to write his own procedure, and he's so blinded by how awesome and smart he is for discovering this new way to fly, he is completely oblivious to the limitations and restrictions he is breakig. Oops.
Back to what Ver said and I can also use the CJ to impress the point, you are in command, you fly the airplane. Don't let instructors, ATC or any external pressures rush you into a situation for failure. If it doesn't look good, vector for a new setup, and if it's an emergency situation, YOU own the airspace. Luckily it only happened twice a year at recurrent, but when I was flying the citation single pilot, unless terrain was an issue SID be damned in a V1 cut. Yes, I could arm LNAV and the airplane would tell me when and where I needed to make turns, but "in the heat of battle" it was easier and safer for me to fly straight out, at least until I have the airplane cleaned up and under control. Why? Because I can.
Goodluck man, I know you are going to kick butt on the next qual. Can't wait to hear the thumbs up update.