How to overcome the fear of making wrong decisions
Posted on May 21, 2019 by Amelia Kruse, One of Thousands of Leadership Coaches on Noomii.
It’s not about right or wrong but about finding the best path forward with what you know.
Decisions, decisions, decisions.
Every day we make hundreds of them. What outfit to wear. When and where to go for lunch. How to word that important email. We make so many decisions so frequently that for the most part we’re not even aware of the decision-making process. It’s intuitive, quick and pain-free.
But as we move through life, inevitably some decisions arise that feel neither quick nor easy. They dig in and take root in our brains and our hearts and force us into a state of turmoil, often for weeks, months or even years at a time. The more we think about them, the less clear the path forward seems. Easy answers elude us. Trade-offs and trip-ups lurk everywhere.
‘Should I hire this individual?’ ‘Is this relationship right for me?’ ‘Where should I take my career next?’ ‘Will this opportunity be a good fit?’
In coaching, sessions with clients often revolve around these types of decisions. Whether it’s a big or small topic, whether it’s something clients have been thinking about for years or has just sprung up, decisions can be a struggle to make.
One of the interesting things about hearing so many different types of people talk about the same challenge is that you start to see threads of commonality emerge. One thread I’ve noticed, especially lately, is that many clients share an obsession with making ‘the right decision.’ Even more so they share a fear of making ‘the wrong decision.’
And believe me, they aren’t alone. Here are some suggestions born of my experience helping clients navigate these choppy waters — suggestions I hope will help relieve some of your stress and guide you toward clarity.
1. STOP SEEING THE WORLD AS BLACK AND WHITE
So often when we face our biggest decisions, we fall into ‘this or that’ thinking. One option is right, the other is wrong, now if only I could figure out which is which.
This is overwhelming and problematic because if you choose this and then that ends up being right, you clearly made the wrong decision and are free to punish yourself forever after.
The truth is that the world isn’t black or white, right or wrong. Life is in the gray. It’s complicated and messy and our decisions are too. Rarely is there a ‘right’ decision or ‘wrong’ decision. At this moment in time, there’s a better decision for you, maybe a best one, and that’s where we want to get to.
One of my clients recently told me that black and white thinking is what has helped him up to this point in life – ‘This is right, that’s wrong, so obviously this is what I should do’. Now he’s trying to make a huge decision around his company and for the first time in his life neither this or that, option A or option B, feel right. So he’s ended up feeling totally lost.
Realizing that he can free himself of the burden of a binary mindset and expand is perspective has been a big help.
2. PINPOINT THE CORE ISSUE
When we get hung up on a decision, usually there’s a deeper cause for our stress. Taking the time to dig into what is at the core of the struggle can help to shed light on which direction to take. Often talking to a trusted person in your life can help to bring you clarity on what’s really going on beneath the surface.
One of my clients pinpointed a core issue recently – She had protected herself from her emotions for so long that she had lost connection to how she felt about things and became paralyzed in making any big decisions. Because our emotions hold a lot of wisdom and are there to give us information in the decision-making process, her inability to access her feelings meant she became stuck and couldn’t make a decision at all. Rationally she could see a path forward but she couldn’t go through with it. She had to first spend the time relearning how to access her feelings (and reducing her fear around being in touch with her emotions) in order to move forward on a big career decision.
Pinpointing the core problem doesn’t guarantee a decision, but it helps advance you toward one.
3. KNOW YOUR VALUES
In coaching we often use value exercises to give clients time to understand what they value. Knowing our values is essential for making good decisions, yet we usually don’t think about them on a daily basis. We think, ‘I have to make a decision right now and I don’t know what the answer is!.’ But if we take a moment to think about what’s really important it can prove illuminating.
Maybe you value kindness or efficiency. Maybe you value sustainability or creativity. Maybe you value accomplishment and hard-work or fun and humor or all of the above.
In all likelihood, you value more than one thing, and having a list of five to ten of the values you most deeply resonate with proves to be a strong guiding light for making hard choices.
4. LISTEN TO YOUR HEAD, HEART AND GUT EQUALLY
A brilliant old coach of mine, Marcia Reynolds, used to talk a lot about our three centers and how crucial they are in helping us make tough decisions. The head is our intellectual center, the heart our emotional center and the gut our intuitive center.
Oftentimes my clients will realize they’re ‘head-heavy’ and overly rationalize everything, or are ‘heart-heavy’ and have strong emotional reactions to situations, or sometimes are ‘gut-heavy’ and will intuitively respond to something without taking a step back and reflecting on other options. Notice where you may be out of balance and see what you can do to help yourself make decisions evenly from your head, heart and gut. Listening to all three centers equally can help you make the best decision.
Getting analog here and picking up a pen and paper to list out what your head, heart and gut are telling you can be useful in providing a visual breakdown of a mental mess. It often doesn’t look quite so messy or intimidating once it’s all on paper and this allows you to gain a broader perspective.
5. USE SELF-COMPASSION
Making big decisions is hard. So give yourself a break and exercise a healthy dose of self-compassion. At the end of the day there’s only so much you can control. That’s where a lot of the fear comes from: the fear of the uncontrollables.
I heard a saying the other day from a friend who is studying Kabbalah. She said, ‘do your best and the light will do the rest.’ So long as you set your intention for making the best decision possible, that’s the best you can do. Let the light (or the universe) do the rest.
Another part of exercising self-compassion is giving yourself space. Space to breathe. Space to relax. Space to listen to yourself and ask what you need in this process. If you give yourself what you need to work through the decision-making process authentically, odds are strong that you’ll get to the place where you can see what the best path forward is for you in that moment.
Amelia Kruse is a Certified Leadership Coach based out of New York City.