Give yourself a short, deliberate pause, then label what your gut is urging you to do and why it feels compelling. Is it anchoring on the first price, halo from one impressive detail, or loss aversion whispering, “don’t risk it”? Naming the pull separates stimulus from response. Write one sentence describing the choice, one identifying suspected bias, and one stating what evidence would make you change your mind. That three-line ritual often breaks the spell long enough to think cleanly.
Actively search for information that would make you choose differently, and do it before you grow attached. Draft a steelmanned opposite view: the strongest fair version of the case against your initial lean. Confirm at least one credible source, or one thoughtful person, who disagrees and why. If you cannot articulate a persuasive counter, you might still be trapped in confirmation bias. This habit makes tactical humility routine, turning intellectual honesty into a repeatable, portable advantage in everyday judgments.
Extend the decision’s consequences beyond the current mood or immediate incentive. Ask how you will feel about this choice in three weeks, three months, and a year. Run a quick pre-mortem: imagine it failed embarrassingly, then list three plausible causes. Also try the regret test—if you repeat this decision style fifty times, would you be proud of the pattern? Longer horizons soften emotional spikes, reveal hidden costs, and refocus attention on durable benefits instead of shiny, short-lived relief.
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