Apply a 3-option / 15-minute rule for routine choices: list exactly three viable alternatives, set a 15-minute timer, compare one measurable criterion (cost, time, reversibility), then select the most reversible option and act. Example: for dinner, compare prep time and available ingredients, pick the fastest reversible meal; for email replies, write a one-line response and send within the window.
Use the following escalation timeline for higher-impact matters: 15 minutes for routine, 24–72 hours to collect facts for medium-impact items, and one week to test logistics for long commitments. People with adhd should shorten windows into micro-tasks, attach calendar reminders, and add an accountability check so management of focus and momentum is built into the process.
Check for destructive instincts: when you notice avoidance or perfectionism, name the fear, estimate its probability numerically (e.g., 10% vs 90%), then make a one-line mitigation plan. These concrete counters stop rumination and help you become outcome-oriented instead of stuck in hypothetical worst cases.
Treat decision-making like pruning weeds: remove low-value options and irrelevant criteria, document the core reason for each pick and a single testable prediction. After four weeks audit results; if success rate by your measure is under 60–70%, tighten thresholds or reduce time windows. Avoid saying vague motives or claiming timeless truths–record measurable signals instead.
Always log trade-offs related to time and resources before committing; tracking creates calibration and shortens the learning curve. Keep one simple table: date, options, reason, predicted outcome, actual outcome; review monthly and adjust the rules when repeated patterns of regret or long delays become apparent.
Concrete, Fast-Acting Decision Routines
Set a 60-second rule: for any low-stakes choice give yourself 60 seconds to pick and act; if you can’t, jot it down and schedule a 10-minute review for the next decision. This prevents keeping options open and reduces repeated worry, aligning choosing with instinct so a passing feeling doesn’t derail action.
Apply a three-option cap: filter options to the top 3 using one metric (cost, time, energy) and decide within two minutes. In many situations – in a store or when planning fitness sessions – this turns complex problem-solving into a simple routine and yields increased decision speed without extra analysis.
Adopt if‑then templates for routine choices: examples – “If I have under 30 minutes, do a 20-minute workout”; “If three shirts pass the fit test in a store, buy the best-fitting one.” Giving yourself defaults avoids paralysis; realize reversible choices remove destructive second-guessing that can hurt confidence, so don’t treat anything as irreversible.
Use a triage for medium-stakes items: cap research at 30 minutes, then sleep on it up to 24 hours; after that pick one option and implement it. This helps you understand trade-offs, identify the few variables that matter, and prevents increased time sunk chasing marginal improvements.
Favor short experiments and clear rollback rules: run a 7-day trial, keep receipts, or set a 3-day satisfaction window. Whatever the domain, small tests let instinct and data converge quickly and turn uncertainty into measurable outcomes you can evaluate with minimal wasted effort.
Define Decision Type in 2 Minutes
Set a 120-second timer and classify the situation into one of three types: 1 = routine/reversible (choose a default and move on), 2 = important/testable (pick the top 2 options and run a short trial), 3 = high-impact/irreversible (pause and allocate extended analysis). Write the number on a note so youre forced to commit; if you tend to procrastinate, force a 10-second micro-choice to eliminate one option. Use this rule to separate what truly matters from noise and stop overthinking ideas that are low-value.
Run a 30-second diagnostic while reflecting: first, who else is affected – relationships or other stakeholders? Second, which facts would change your pick of options? Third, the emotional root: are you afraid of loss or excited about growth? If youre feeling quiet doubt, listen to the whispers–name the fear and test its probability. Remove mental cages by stating the worst realistic outcome and whether you could tolerate it.
Use concrete thresholds: estimate number impact (routine ~70% of daily choices, tactical ~25%, strategic ~5%). Allocate time: routine 0–2 minutes, tactical 10–90 minutes, strategic 24–72 hours. If youre indecisive though, cap analysis to impact×10 minutes and log one metric: regret score 0–10 after 7 days; if average regret >6, adjust process. Think like an experimenter: treat decisions as small tests, iterate on learning, and note where some patterns repeat so you can automate repeatable choices.
Limit Options with a Time Box

Set a 10-minute time box and limit choices to three; rank them 1–3 and commit to the top pick when the timer rings.
Use a three-criterion quick matrix: cost, time-to-implement, alignment with your identity. Assign 1–5 points per criterion, sum scores, and follow the highest total. This reduces open comparisons and cuts average choosing time by design.
If the situation is simple (routine purchase, quick reply), use 2–5 minute boxes; for strategic choices, use 30–90 minute boxes and schedule a single follow session 24 hours later. research on decision fatigue supports shorter bursts for routine tasks and breaks between intense sessions.
If adhd or chronic avoidance is a symptom, shorten the box and add a default rule: if nothing is made within the box, accept the default option. This lever pulls behavior towards action and reduces the mental cost of choosing.
Keep a one-line editor log for each box: option chosen, reason (one sentence), immediate outcome after 24–72 hours. That log reduces second-guessing, clarifies what causes regret, and shifts your status from stalled to intentional.
When a decision still feels wrong, ask whether the feeling is about identity or the decision itself; if it’s identity-based, treat it as data for future alignment rather than a veto. theres no value in endless rehashing – most mistakes are reversible and low-cost compared to long delay.
Apply this rule-of-thumb: three options, time box appropriate to task size, one-line rationale, follow-up check. Over time this trains decision-making behavior so choices feel less heavy and more like a predictable line you can follow.
Set a 24-Hour Default Path
Pick a single 24-hour template and run it as your default: wake 07:00, two focused work blocks (90 and 120 minutes), one movement session (30 minutes), uninterrupted lunch (45 minutes), one admin block (60 minutes), social/learning slot (60 minutes), wind-down routine beginning 21:00, sleep by 22:30; deviate only for pre-defined high-priority triggers.
Define triggers as a checklist: urgent client request, health signal, safety issue, or a calendar item marked “must”; if none apply, yeah follow the default. If a new task takes more than 10 minutes to evaluate, select “defer to default” and slot it into tomorrow. This rule reduces time spent weighing options and actually increases throughput.
Track outcomes numerically for 14 days: completion rate of scheduled blocks (%), average decision time for new tasks (minutes), number of enforced deviations, and daily ratings for well-being, happiness, and perceived productivity (1–10). Aim for a completion rate ≥75% and a decision time under 5 minutes; adjust block lengths into 15-minute increments until metrics improve.
Use a simple capture system in hand: a 3‑item paper list or one-line app entry that records task name, position in priority, and why it cannot wait. When leaving a task, add a single follow-up note so tasks that were paused resume faster. Trusting this minimal friction increases task continuity and supports health and success metrics.
Adopt a “gardners” mentality: plant routines, water them daily, prune choices weekly. Move low-value options to a parking list and revisit once per week; also archive repeated parking items to discover what to remove. I use this myself to keep decisions small and move towards measurable experiences rather than indefinite planning.
| Čas | Action | Duration | Trigger | Success Metric |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 07:00 | Wake + hydrate | 15 min | default | Wake within 15 min of target |
| 07:30 | Morning focus | 90 min | default | 90% of block uninterrupted |
| 10:00 | Movement | 30 min | zdraví | HR increase or steps ≥2,000 |
| 12:00 | Lunch | 45 min | default | No screens for 30 min |
| 13:00 | Deep work | 120 min | default | 2 major deliverables progressed |
| 16:00 | Admin | 60 min | default | Inbox ≤20 items |
| 18:00 | Social/Learning | 60 min | default | 1 new insight or connection |
| 21:00 | Wind-down | 90 min | default | Read or relax, screen off by 21:30 |
| 22:30 | Sleep | 8 hrs target | default | Sleep onset ≤30 min |
Set a daily check at 20:00: log deviations, rate mood and energy, and select one tweak to adopt for the next day. Keep this process simple to build trust in the system; trusting the default reduces small-choice fatigue and channels attention into health, learning, and repeatable success.
Score Pros and Cons in 1-2 Minutes
Set a 90-second timer and score pros vs cons with numbers – pick if net ≥ +2, drop if net ≤ −2, test if between −1 and +1.
- Prep (15–25s): write the task on one line, whats at stake, and one clear outcome. Only list the top 3 pros and top 3 cons; bring along a pen or phone note.
- Quick scoring (45–60s): for each pro give Impact (1–3) × Likelihood (1–3) = value. Do the same for cons and treat them negative. Example: Impact 3 × Likelihood 2 = 6 points. Sum pros minus cons for net score.
- Bias control (5–10s): don’t paint the worst-case as default – if a con feels huge because you’re afraid it’ll hurt, subtract an extra point only when its likelihood is real. If you’d rather test, downgrade long-term fear to a 1 until proven.
- Decision rule (5–10s): net ≥ +2 → act; net ≤ −2 → decline; net −1..+1 → run a 3–7 day micro-test or do a 24-hour trial doing the minimal viable action.
- Handle doubts (single step): write the most likely objection you’ll later use for second-guessing or to second-guess yourself and note one concrete countermeasure you can do if that objection happens.
Use this short routine to reduce overthink and the worry cycle: quick numeric scoring converts vague ideas into measurable trade-offs, so after a decision is made you’re less likely to be claiming you should have chosen otherwise. If you’re not comfortable, pick a micro-test – reduced stakes plus problem-solving feedback removes the urge to overthink. Knowing a fallback to handle setbacks cuts fear of being hurt and makes you more sure about acting on usable ideas you’ve used before.
Prototype a Tiny Implementation and Decide Now
Start a 2-hour micro-prototype: build the smallest working artifact that demonstrates the core value and test it with 5 target users within 48 hours.
Measure three concrete KPIs: task completion rate (goal ≥70%), answers to 5 direct questions about clarity and value, and one business metric you can attribute to the prototype (signups, revenue, time saved). Record raw numbers and verbatim quotes so you see the truth, not your optimism.
Design the prototype to expose the exact choices you’re uncertain about; remove any extra contents or features that don’t test that choice. Weed out assumptions ahead of the session so you avoid the common mistake of testing a long list of features instead of a single hypothesis.
Use a short script of questions to reduce indecisiveness in analysis: ask what they would stop using, what they’d pay for, and what confused them. Hand each participant the same task and note time-on-task; almost all decisive signals come from repeatable patterns, though single strong quotes can matter for framing.
Set acceptance rules before testing: if task completion <50% change plan or stop; if conversion ≥30% run a 1-week working sprint to scale. This removes debate caused by destructive mindsets and reduces decision paralysis because you have numbers and a timeline in hand.
Address fears explicitly in the debrief: ask testers what stopped them and what would make them certain to return. Talk about trade-offs rather than ideal outcomes and make the decision to continue, pivot or kill the idea within 72 hours of testing to avoid long, unnecessary hesitation.
Rule of thumb: limit each prototype to one hypothesis, two metrics, one clear next action. Do it now – small experiments produce more truth than months of talk and planning.
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