Per Wikipedia:

Analysis paralysis (or paralysis by analysis) describes an individual or group process where overanalyzing or overthinking a situation can cause forward motion or decision-making to become “paralyzed”, meaning that no solution or course of action is decided upon within a natural time frame.

I, as many others suppose, have many things I’d like to do in my lifetime. Nonetheless, even though I’ve gotten better at it over the years, I still feel easily overwhelmed by all the things I want to do, the things I feel like I’m supposed to do, and the things I must do. What have been your best ways to tackle this? How do you prioritize and find time for different interests, exercise while still combining it with work and other stuff?

  • moakley@lemmy.world
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    8 hours ago

    When I go to a restaurant, I don’t read the whole menu anymore. As soon as I find something I’d like, I stop reading and order it. Occasionally my wife will point out something on the next page that she thinks I’d like more, but I don’t do it myself.

    It’s made my dining experience so much better over the years. I don’t stress about the food I’d rather eat and just enjoy what’s in front of me.

    It works because in that situation, like many situations, there’s more than one right answer. If I get the omelette, I’ll be happy. If I get the pancakes, I’ll be happy. If I get the omelette while I’m thinking about the pancakes (or vice versa), that’s the only wrong answer.

    So that’s something I like to remind myself of. Sometimes you’re stressing yourself out between two right answers, so it’s ok to just pick one and run with it.

  • JustAnotherKay@lemmy.world
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    21 hours ago

    I was taught at some point in my life about “SMART Goals”

    Specific

    Measurable

    Achievable

    Relevant

    Time-Bound

    The work we had to do was stupid and tedious, but setting goals according to this scheme has actually positively affected my life

    • papalonian@lemmy.world
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      20 hours ago

      Took a class in college called “college success”, and it was literally a class on just getting your shit together. A lot of the information was stuff that everyone already knows, but having it actually spelled out, defined, and being shown how it positively effects your life was absolutely game changing for me.

      SMART was one of the first lessons. I don’t look at the whole acronym for setting goals anymore, but the ones I do focus on are measurable and achievable - it doesn’t do you any good to say, “I want to build my savings up” or “I’m gonna grind hard, take 20 units this semester and graduate a semester early”. You’ll never feel like you’ve built your savings up enough if you don’t have a specific goal in mind, and setting unreasonable goals to “push yourself” will just make you feel like a failure, even if you knew the goal was unattainable (I’ve always hated the “shoot for the moon, if you miss you’ll hit the stars” attitude - I set reasonable goals, and when I achieve them, they are raised. Setting a goal you know you can’t reach is almost always going to demotivate you from ever trying to reach it)

      • JustAnotherKay@lemmy.world
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        16 hours ago

        Agreed in every point. I do use just about the whole acronym personally, cause I do struggle a bit with specificity and timeliness in my goals when I don’t.

        Especially your last point in the parentheses, a lot of people tell me “you need to be more realistic.”

        No I don’t, you just asked for the wrong thing. You asked for my long term plan when what you wanted to know was “where do you wanna be in 6 months.” Long term isn’t 6 months to me, I have a 1000 year plan for my nonprofit. But if you wanna know what I’ve got in store for 6 months from now, then I can tell you that too because I’ve got steps to follow.

        Don’t shoot for the moon and hope to end up in the stars. Create a detailed plan to get to get to the moon, and then get to the stars from there

  • Majorllama@lemmy.world
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    23 hours ago

    I just assign a number between one and six to each choice. And then I roll a dice.

    If the dice lands on something and my immediate reaction is “God dammit” I roll again until I get a choice I like.

    Sometimes you don’t even know a choice isn’t one you want on the table until you pick it out of a lineup of other choices.

  • Suck_on_my_Presence@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Zen coin flip.

    Assign the faces to whichever choice at the time. Flip the coin. If you don’t like the result and would rather do the other, then do the other. If you really don’t care between them, then do the one it lands on.

    Of course with equal weight items, not like “heads, I get to sleep and jerk off all day, tails I go to work”.

  • Maalus@lemmy.world
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    21 hours ago

    Make rules for yourself about common decisions, always do the same thing. I.e. always go pee when you feel the need in bed, never “sleep it off”. Truly believe that “no decision is worse than a bad decision”. Bang, done.

  • CMLVI@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Is it something actually meaningful or is it just general choices through your day?

    I’ve turned the meaningless stuff into a game with people I know. If it’s just a decision effecting me, I’ll text someone and say “pick a number 1-10”. I’ll assign even or odd to “do x” or “don’t do x” and depending on what they pick, my choice is made. If it’s a group decision (go to bar, stay in, where to eat, what movie, etc) then I have an app on my phone for “Spin the Wheel” and we spin it to see what choice is made. We “leave it up to fate” now lol.

    Also, if you feel really strongly about something but don’t want to commit, it can help push you. If I really want to eat somewhere but don’t wanna force it, I either have to accept a different choice or make myself do it. Anyone is “allowed” to intervene before the wheel has done to make their choice known.

    We also don’t do best 2 of 3, or respins. It’s ond and done; fate is never wrong.

    • Rhynoplaz@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      We also don’t do best 2 of 3, or respins. It’s ond and done; fate is never wrong.

      Although, sometimes, spinning the wheel and regretting the result is a good way of learning that you actually didn’t want that option to begin with.

      • CMLVI@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        For sure, it really helps, as dumb as it sounds. If you truly don’t care, you get your choice made for you. If you do care, you find out pretty quick you should be up front about it

  • lietuva@lemmy.world
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    23 hours ago

    >In any moment of decision, the best thing you can do is the right thing, the next best thing is the wrong thing, and the worst thing you can do is nothing. - Theodore Roosevelt

    or like Eminem said just do it lalalala, go crazy lalalala

  • Feelfold@lemm.ee
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    16 hours ago

    Read a little de Beauvoir, or Sartre. Existentialism always puts things in perspective.

    • orgrinrt@lemmy.world
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      15 hours ago

      And switch it towards absurdism and especially Camus towards the end. Having the “…but it is, or can be, actually good” angle really helps adapting that mindset to real life action and motivation.

  • Onno (VK6FLAB)@lemmy.radio
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    1 day ago

    This is very common and the solution is simple:

    1. Put the choices in a list.
    2. Compare item 1 with item 2, and pick the best option for whatever reason and ignore all the other choices.
    3. Remove the losing option from the list.
    4. Go to step 2 until there is only one choice left.

    This works because every item you eliminated was worse than at least one other item in the list.

  • leaky_shower_thought@feddit.nl
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    23 hours ago

    i default to the whatever can be finished early with what i currently have thinking. this is not the fastest per se but in my head, it strikes a nice balance.

    and if that is not the right way to do it, i have less regrets because the move was cheap.