It is a bit late for this I suppose but, before I install the intake manifold, I index each lifter with a sharpie and turn the engine over by hand looking to see that all the lifters rotate as the engine is cycled. If the flat tappet lifters don't rotate, is almost a sure sign that there will be a problem sooner than later (not enough taper on the cam lobe or radius on the lifter face). If I'm using double springs I'll leave the inner springs out for cam/engine break in as well. Your temporary fuel system needs to be able supply fuel for at least 20 minutes and the cooling system needs to be good, read big fan in front of the radiator. The battery needs to be fully charged and have a functioning charging system. Once it starts, do your best to get the timing close to correct (+/-4 degrees, use total mechanical timing, vacuum advance disconnected and hoses plugged). Occasionally vary the engine speed with the throttle from 2000-4000 RPM to help seat the rings. Monitor oil pressure and coolant temperature (not the dash gauges/engine is toast lights). If the engine doesn't want to start, figure out why, don't just keep cranking it a lot, a few restarts will be fine. If everything goes reasonably well, drive it easy a bit (100-200 miles) and change the oil and filter (with oil with appropriate levels of ZDDP, not additives, about 1200-1500 PPM). After all of this, if you want to be certain all is well, or there may be a problem, use an oil filter cutter (really big tubing cutter) to remove the outer shell of the oil filter to see if there are any shiny bits inside, don't worry about a small amount of near black film that may be there.
I know this is a lot to absorb, and I'm not trying to give you an anxiety attack, but if you do most of the above it will likely go well. It is also helpful to have someone to help in case you need to have someone shut it down in a hurry (fuel or coolant leak, over temp or low oil pressure).
In the "for what it is worth column", I did almost none of the above on my first solo rebuild and it turned out fine. I hope this helps more than hurts. I hope all goes well. Chuck