Highly analytical people often suffer from decision paralysis because they pursue perfect information and outcomes rather than good enough solutions. Research by Herbert Simon and Barry Schwarz distinguishes between 'maximizers' (who seek the best possible option and feel obligated to explore every possibility) and 'satisficers' (who accept the first option meeting their criteria). The 70% rule suggests that in complex environments, once you have about 70% of the information, you've reached maximum efficiency—the remaining 30% is often a 'ghost' that doesn't exist. Overthinking treats reversible decisions (two-way doors) with the same gravity as irreversible ones (one-way doors), and self-efficacy—the belief in your ability to handle outcomes—is built through action, not analysis. Perfectionism is essentially sophisticated procrastination that protects against vulnerability but prevents growth.
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Why Highly Analytical People Can’t Make DecisionsAdded:
You've been crafting this text message for the last 20 minutes. You've written three different versions of the same sentence only to delete them all. Now you're debating whether a period at the end makes you sound too cold or if emoji makes you look like you are trying too hard. While you are stuck in this loop, the person you are addressing is living their life completely unaware that you are currently running a high stakes simulation of their potential emotional reaction.
You are stuck because you can see every single way this tiny interaction could fail. You have this 360° view. Your intelligence has identified so many variables that your ability to move has simply evaporated. If you are tired of being the person who can predict every outcome but can't actually start one, this episode is for you. We're going to look at the clinical mechanisms of why your brain treats a simple choice like a life of death death mission and what you can do about it. I'm Tomas and this is clinical breakdown.
How many of us think that having more information leads to a better life? Now, when you we have access to basically unlimited amount of data, we assume the perfect choice must be somewhere out there, hidden behind one more Google search or one more conversation with the AI. But for people who consider themselves analytical, this pursuit of the best outcome is psychological trap.
In 1950, Herbert Simon identified a fundamental divide in human decision-making. He categorized us into the two groups, satisficers and maximizers.
Quick correction. Uh during editing, I noticed an inconsistency here. I said Herbert Simon categorized people into maximizers and satisfers, but that's not actually accurate. Simon introduced the concept of satisfying and Barry Schwarz later developed the maximizer versus satisfer distinction. A satisficer has a set of criteria. They need a laptop that is fast, has a good screen and cost under a certain amount. They find that first one that fits, buy it and never think about it again. Their brain moves to next task. But if you are stuck seeing every angle, you are maximizer.
You don't want a good laptop. You want the definitive laptop. You feel a personal obligation to ensure that no better option exists anywhere in the known universe for that price point. You read one-star reviews and the page 14 of an obscure forum because you're terrified [clears throat] of the hidden flaw that everyone else missed. The research into this is grim. Barry Schwarz, a psychologist who expanded on this in his work, The Paradox of Choice, found the maximizers objectively end up with better things. They might find slightly faster processor or cheaper flight, but they are consistently more miserable. When you see every angle, you also see other side of the coin, every lost opportunity. By picking path number one, you are painfully aware that you are not choosing path number two, 19 or 20. You've simulated 20 different decisions. So in the end, you mourn the loss of remaining 19 opportunities. In contrary, if you are satisfers, your perspective is different. You don't lose anything because you were looking just for one thing and you fulfilled your criteria. Both of you made same decision but only one of you feels the mood for celebration. This constant moing or what could have been is exactly what keeps us frozen in the research phase. We aren't looking for a solution anymore. We are looking for a guarantee. The reason some of us stay in the angle seeking phase for so long is that we are waiting for a feeling of certainty. We believe that if we just analyze a bit more we will eventually eventually reach a point where risk hits zero. But in decisions there is a principle known as 70% rule.
It suggests that in any complex environment once you have about 70% of the information you have reached the point of maximum efficiency. The remaining 30% of certain certainty is usually a ghost. It doesn't exist because the world is too chaotic to predict perfectly. You can spend another six weeks trying to find that last 30%.
But by the time you think you have it, the variables have changed. The person you are going to message has moved on.
The job opening has been filled. The perfect moment has passed. The cost of this delay is rarely factored into our analysis. We calculate the risk of doing the wrong thing, but we almost never calculate the massive compounding cost of doing nothing. In clinical work, we look at two-way doors versus oneway door. A one-way door is a decision that is nearly impossible to undo, like a permanent legal commitment. Those deserve the 360 degree view, but 99% of daily paralysis is caused by two-way doors. If you choose the wrong project or the wrong vacation spot, you can walk back through the door and try something else. The overthinker treats a lunch order with the same gravity as the heart surgery. You are treating paper doors like they are made of six-foot think concrete. The angles you are calculating don't actually exist until you move.
If most of those doors are made of paper, then why we are still standing in the hallway? Because we've made the mistake of believing that thinking is a valid substitute for experience. When you stand still and analyze, you are looking at a static map. You're guessing what the terrain looks like. But the moment you take step, even a wrong one, the map updates in real time. You get bio feedback from reality that was literally impossible to see from your starting position. Psychology uses the term self-efficacy to describe your belief in your ability to handle what comes next. Overthinking is the opposite of self-efficacy. It's a declaration that you don't trust yourself to handle the angles as they appear. So you have to solve them all before you start. But you don't build self-efficacy by thinking. You build it by making a good enough choice and believing in yourself enough to know that when things get messy, you are smart enough to fix it.
Your high functioning brain is actually much better at time problem solving than it's at future simulating. you are wasting your best asset, your ability to adapt by trying to prevent the need for adaptation in the first place. The goal isn't to be right before you start. The goal is to start so you can finally see what actually is right. So if you're stuck right now, stop looking at the right angle. There isn't one. You there is only the path you choose and the way you handle the fallout. Your ability to see every possibility is a gift when you're debugging code or designing a bridge. But it is a prison when you are trying to live a life. Perfectionism is just procrastination in a suit and a tie. It it is sophistic sophisticated shield you use to protect yourself from the vulnerability of being seen, being wrong, or just being human. Remember, everything is a trade-off. You always lose something to gain something. This is clinical breakdown and please tell me in the comment down below what is the first good enough step that would finally give you the relief of being in motion.
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