Decision Mastery Clarity Before Action

Identity Check

Say this

Who am I doing this for?

Do this now 3 min

Write the decision in one line. Below it, answer: "Whose goal is this — mine, or someone else's?" If the honest answer includes status, guilt, or fear of judgment, circle it.

Use when

You're chasing an outcome that feels expected but not energising.

Avoid when

You've already confirmed the choice aligns with your values and further reflection would be stalling.


Why it works

Misaligned goals create chronic friction — checking ownership catches borrowed ambitions before they cost years.

Goals that come from external pressure — status, guilt, fear of judgment — create a specific kind of friction. You can force yourself toward them for a while, but the effort compounds into resentment or burnout because the motivation has no internal anchor. Autonomy is the strongest predictor of sustained performance and wellbeing. Tracing a decision back to its source — is this mine or borrowed? — catches misalignment before it costs months or years. The honest answer sometimes includes uncomfortable truths about whose approval you’re chasing.


Go deeper · 8 min read
Autonomy and Borrowed Goals: Why Misaligned Decisions Create Chronic Friction
Not every goal that feels like yours actually is. When a decision is driven by someone else's expectations, the friction isn't a motivation problem — it's a misalignment problem, and no amount of discipline will fix it.
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