
Sometimes there comes a point in our lives when we have to make a decision that may change our lives drastically. How can we make the best choice? Is there a best choice? What is the wrong choice? I was doing some research and found some really great advice at maninthemirror.org
which gives an interesting perspective.
A PERSPECTIVE
Here are some considerations to help make better decisions:
- Know that many major decisions do                                turn out wrong. A                                man became restless after twenty one years with                                the same company. He could not isolate the source                                of his feelings, but decided he needed a change.                                Since that time he has bounced around from job to                                job, never keeping the same position more than three                                years.
 
 A couple decided to move to a "better" neighborhood. There was nothing wrong with their present neighborhood. In fact, they loved their neighbors, the location was convenient, crime was low, the mortgage payment was a pittance, and they couldn't really find anything wrong with their existing home. Their new house required much more upkeep than they had figured. The higher payments created a great deal of tension between them. Soon they began pointing fingers at each other, blaming one another for deciding to leave the old neighborhood.
 
 If you are not content with yourself where you are, you will not be content where you are going. It is an error to think that changing our circumstances alone will make us happy or content. Often we cling to some selfish ambition that is at odds with leading a surrendered life.
 
 
-  Count the cost of making the wrong                                decision. Perhaps the greatest lesson                                I've learned about making major decisions is the                                cost of making the wrong decision. When decisions                                turn out right, "I" am brilliant. When                                they turn out wrong, "you" really blew                                it! Think about this next statement: The greatest                                time waster in our lives is the time we spend undoing                                that which ought not to have been done in the first                                place. Do you agree.
 
 Usually we can recover if we make a bad choice. Sometimes, however, we can't. Never make a decision that bets the entire ranch on being right.
 
 
- Most decisions are obvious given enough                                information and time. When do we make                                poor decisions? When we don't have our facts straight                                and when we are hasty. Keep collecting data. Write                                it down so you don't forget it. The mind by itself                                may blow one small fact all out of proportion. Writing                                it down puts things in perspective. Talk to wise                                counselors; get other people's perspective. Talk                                to experts who have skill better to operate from                                fact than feeling.
 
 Ours is an impatient world, a hasty world, an impulsive world. If my computer takes three seconds to sort 20,000,000 bytes of data instead of one second I get frustrated. Let's get real! It takes time to make a wise, major decision. The mind may know quickly what to do, but it takes time for our emotions to catch up. We have vested positions which only time can change. We must wait for that "gut feeling," which is our subconscious mind informing our conscious mind of the results of its thorough and complete analysis.
Leave me a comment and let me know what you think! or email me at 0a4w@virginia.edu
 

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