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Caroline Beaton
Caroline Beaton
Psychology

Here's How to Feel Satisfied With Your Life Decisions

Modern psychology offers three ways to make peace with your decisions.

Dragon Images/Shutterstock
Source: Dragon Images/Shutterstock

A reader recently emailed me, "I feel like I have been pushed out of an airplane with a parachute that has a dozen different pull cords. I don’t know which one will save me, or which will kill me, but I do know I have to do something before I hit the ground."

Such is the painful paralysis of making life decisions in the modern age. Gone are the days when you just took over your dad’s business; if you did that now, you’d be “settling.” Gone is the era of believing that, as one traditionalist said in David Mitchell’s novel Cloud Atlas, “no matter what you do it will never amount to anything more than a single drop in a limitless ocean”; today’s parents tell us that the world is our oyster.

These days, fulfilling our greatest potential—not finding a suitable partner—is the most important thing.

We welcome this newfound opportunity, but we also suffer from it. We fear making the wrong decisions so much that, ironically, we often compromise our potential in the process. Overwhelmed with options, we tend to regret our decisions, obsess over alternatives, or simply not choose at all.

Endless articles tell us how to make the most of our lives. But if we don’t learn how to be satisfied with our decisions, we may lead full lives, but they'll be regret-laden.

Fortunately, psychology offers three ways to make peace with your decisions:

1. Blame your gut.

Sometimes we feel guilty about relying on gut decisions. One hiring manager conceded, “I hate to say this, but a lot of it is gut feeling.” But trusting your gut has perks—though maybe not the ones you think.

Have you ever tried that exercise where you sit, close your eyes, and think of an important, impending decision? You ask, “Should I do this?” and, supposedly, if you lean back or feel compelled backward, the answer is no, but if you lean forward, the answer is yes.

I recently tried this when debating whether to accept an unpaid speaking engagement in New York City. I leaned back, so I decided to decline the invitation. It’s embarrassing to admit, but I have no regrets.

It’s impossible to know whether leaning back is actually your intuition talking, but here’s what matters: Thinking that your intuition is talking.

In one study, consumers viewed their purchases more positively when “decisions had been made in the absence of attentive deliberation.” The authors concluded, “Contrary to conventional wisdom, it is not always advantageous to engage in thorough conscious deliberation before choosing.” In other words, we like our decisions better when we didn’t consciously, painstakingly choose them. We prefer decisions that feel subliminal.

In short, decision satisfaction hinges not so much on listening to your gut but, rather, blaming it.

2. Don’t change your mind.

Once you’ve explored your options and what you want—a critical step for satisfied and sound decisions—make the decision as if it’s final.

In one study, participants were asked to pick a piece of art to take home. Individuals told they could later exchange the piece for another experienced less appreciation for their chosen artwork than people who were given no such option. Interestingly, participants didn't anticipate this effect, instead assuming that more choice would be better.

In short, even if you do backtrack, don’t tell yourself that you can “always change your mind” when you’re making a decision. This could make the decision less satisfying.

Moreover, some research suggests that changing your mind at all can be risky. We continue evaluating choices even after they’ve passed through our field of vision or conscious awareness. When we change our minds based on evidence processed after making a decision, we often make worse choices.

3. Justify your decision.

There is a little-known third co-founder of Apple named Ronald Wayne. Two weeks after Apple was incorporated in 1976, Wayne left and sold his 10 percent stake in the company for $800. Now 84, Wayne lives off his social security check outside Las Vegas. His shares would have been worth $63 billion.

Wayne’s explanation for his decision to sell his Apple stock may have saved him a lifetime of angst: “If I stayed at Apple, I would have probably ended up the richest man in the cemetery,” he told CNN. This rationalization might sound wishful, or even dishonest. Maybe it is. But it’s also an adaptive mechanism for coping with regret to preserve well-being and future performance.

Nietzsche called this “amor fati”—loving one’s fate. “One wants nothing to be different, not forward, not backward, not in all eternity,” he wrote in his final book.

The Takeaway: Being satisfied with your decisions has less to do with your actual decisions and more to do with how you see and rationalize them. When we blame our intuition, commit to our choices, and rationalize our decisions, we maximize not just our potential, but also our fulfillment.

A version of this article originally appeared on Forbes. Sign up for my newsletter to get my articles delivered straight to your inbox.

LinkedIn image: GaudiLab/Shutterstock

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About the Author
Caroline Beaton

Caroline Beaton is a freelance journalist based in Denver. Her writing on psychology, health and culture has appeared in the Atlantic, Vice, Forbes and elsewhere.

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