Decision Mastery Slow the Impulse

False Deadline Check

Say this

Who decided this was urgent — and what actually breaks if I wait?

Do this now 2 min

Write down the deadline driving this decision. Below it, answer: Who set this deadline? What specifically happens if it slips by one week? If the answer is 'nothing concrete', cross out the deadline and set your own.

Use when

You feel rushed to decide and the urgency is coming from a timeline rather than the situation itself.

Avoid when

The deadline is externally binding — a legal filing, a contract clause, a genuine expiration.


Why it works

Most deadlines are inherited, not real. Questioning who set them and what happens if they slip reveals that the urgency is often someone else's preference disguised as your constraint.

Urgency is the most effective decision-manipulation tool that exists, and most of it is artificial. ‘We need an answer by Friday’ sounds like a hard constraint until you ask what happens on Saturday — and the answer is usually ‘nothing, we just wanted to keep things moving.’ Inherited deadlines are especially dangerous because they feel authoritative. Someone upstream set a date, it cascaded down, and now you’re rushing a decision to meet a timeline that was arbitrary from the start. Reclaiming the deadline doesn’t mean ignoring all time pressure. It means distinguishing between real consequences and manufactured urgency.


Go deeper · 8 min read
Manufactured Urgency: Why Most Deadlines Are Someone Else's Preference Disguised as Your Constraint
'We need an answer by Friday' sounds like a constraint until you ask what happens on Saturday. The answer is almost always nothing — but the artificial urgency has already degraded the quality of whatever you decided.
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