Remove the indecision before you attempt to increase speed.
Indecision drains more energy than effort ever will. It keeps multiple paths open, invites constant reevaluation, and fractures commitment. What feels like careful thinking is often disguised avoidance.
Every additional option splits attention. Every alternate route weakens force. When you allow branching paths to remain available, you move forward without full conviction.
Clarity compounds. One path. One direction. One defined sequence from entry to completion. Momentum builds when motion stops changing direction.
To remove the indecision, eliminate optional exits. Decide once. Execute once. Refuse to reopen the question unless new data demands it. Most of the time, there is no new data — only discomfort.
Discomfort is not evidence of a wrong decision. It is evidence of commitment.
High performers do not constantly reassess settled choices. They commit, adjust only when necessary, and conserve cognitive bandwidth for execution. That is structural discipline.
When you remove the indecision, you remove internal friction. When you remove internal friction, output stabilizes. When output stabilizes, progress compounds.
Today’s move: Identify one decision you keep revisiting. Lock it. Stop renegotiating it. Direct your energy forward instead of sideways.
