Creating the conditions for better decision making.

If you are hustled, anxious or rushed, it's unlikely you'd make a good decision. What's likely is that the discomfort will force you to make choices you wouldn't have chosen had the circumstances be different.

Better decision making requires us to make decisions when they are not urgent, when we are not in the mud already.

And when we separate the "go/no-go decisions" from the "how decisions" and finally taking the action, we are able to move forward more elegantly.

It's worth the effort to create these conditions with intent.