Do You Over-Think Small Decisions?
Erica Ariel Fox
New York Times Bestselling Author of WINNING FROM WITHIN | Lecturer at Harvard Law School | Leadership Advisor
Every week I move certain things from my To Do list over to the next week. I’ve thought about these things many times between Monday and Friday. But come the end of the week, I need to write them down again for next week.
Why?
Because I can’t decide.
The Tyranny of Indecision
I ask myself: Will I go to this event? Speak at this conference? Will I fly the day before, and get my sea legs in the new time zone, or leave at the last minute, to spend more of Sunday with my family? Will I take one for the team, or take better care of myself? And on it goes.
Needless to say, moving these questions from week to week is the opposite of the conventional wisdom: touch it once and move on.
Why can’t I – and people who share this affliction – choose decisively? It isn’t simple procrastination. You often have fun procrastinating, watching TV or surfing the web. We suffer while we deliberate.
It stems in part from a perfectionist need to get to the right answer. For the Ruminators like me, it feels wrenching to decide because we might make the wrong call.
Finding a Way Forward
I’m starting to move more efficiently through the morass of making trade-offs. It’s gotten easier as I’ve embraced two basic insights.
1) There is no right answer to questions like this.
That’s why it feels so diabolically difficult to find one. By their very nature, trade-offs have upsides and downsides either way you go.
2) It doesn’t hurt more to decide quickly. It hurts less.
Some part of me has believed that if I think about the choice over and over, then by the time I make it, I’ll have more peace of mind. At least I’ll know I’ve carefully thought it through. But that is dead wrong. Prolonging the process – particularly in cases where the stakes just aren’t that high – makes everything worse, from keeping people waiting for an answer, to the shame I feel every time I write the item down week after week. It turns out there’s a lot less pain to thinking about it once (or twice), deciding, and moving on.
Now I'm on a campaign. It's called Stop Ruminating. Decide Now. As part of my effort, I wrote a little sign and put it above my desk. It says "do it swiftly and don't linger." If you over-think small decisions like I do, maybe you should try it, too.
What are your thoughts? I'd love to hear your comments.
Business Office Manager at The Heritage Nursing &Rehabilitation Facility
9 年I love this and I will be using your number two as my number one! Thank you for sharing.
Director PMO APAC
9 年The dilemma of the perfectionist. It can be hard to make a decision when all the options seem wrong. We wait for the perfect option to present itself. It never does. And when we do make the decision, we come back and revisit and re-question the decision. I just read an blog by DJ Patil which he said if you are going to fail, do it quickly. I have added a line to the end of your mantra and put it on my desk "move on".
Educational Design
10 年Definitely guilty of this one....
Director, Data Cloud Product Management @ Salesforce | Driving SQL Query Engine Innovation. Any posts are my personal views only.
10 年haha I love this because I always seem to be moving tasks from week to week. I know the solution is to focus on 1-2 for the week and just do them (like you said) but somehow it doesn't happen. In my mind, they're usually not the priority so if I want them done, I either have to pair up with someone to do them OR trick my brain into thinking that they're higher priority than what I'm working on that week.