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Relationships
2010-11-01 13:31:00
“Her indecision drives me crazy.”
Answer: Your partner clearly requires professional help. Her “indecision phobias” are not occasional occurrences. We all have indecision moments in our lives, stalling to analyze a complex situation can be the right choice when important decisions are at stake. However, when “indecision paralysis” happens daily, no matter whether the decision is a minor one, such as ordering a meal or as major one such as weighing a job offer, then we’re dealing with a psychological dysfunction.
In many cases, the inability to make decisions is based on lack of confidence. The severity of this disorder maybe rooted in childhood experiences. An acquaintance of mine admits that when he was a boy his father kept accusing him that he couldn’t do anything right. Eventually he believed his father. Throughout his growing up years and his adult life he had serious self doubts. He felt he was a failure and became withdrawn and panicked when having to make a decision. Only extensive counseling helped him change his destructive belief.
A loving partner or a trusted friend can often be a sounding board when we’re unsure about making a decision. The very process of talking out the issues can clarify the problem for the help seeker. Sharing his or her dilemma doesn’t necessarily mean that the help seeker expects the listener to come up with the solution. More likely he or she simply requires a non-judgmental, trusted person to hear them out.
When indecision confronts you, consider
the following points:
•Life is ambiguous, nobody can
control every outcome.
•Trust your inner voice when you’re
not sure which choice to make.
With the right attitude and
confidence you can make your
choice become right.
•Don’t make the decision that you
believe others expect from you.
Make the decision that feels right
for you.
•When others are affected in the
outcome of your decision, consider
their position as well as yours.
Ask; is your decision fair or solely
beneficial to you?
•Sometimes our minds are clouded
because we see only the problems
rather than the opportunities.
Stand back and look at the bigger
picture. Where are you going in
your life, what are your priorities?
What are the big pluses, where is
the opportunity?
•Don’t focus too narrowly when
it comes to significant decisions.
How does your decision affect
your family, your health, your
economic wellbeing? Addressing
the basics first you may choose a
different outcome.
•If you recognize that you’ve made
the wrong decision, don’t fret. In
business as well as in personal
life, there is always an alternative
to make a wrong, right.
•Every decision involves a certain
degree of risk. But without risk
there is rarely any gain.
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