Some decisions are easy to make, natural even, while others are hard. With the hard ones, there’s always a compromise that has to be made, a give and take. In economic terms, there’s an opportunity cost for every decision. For example, by not eating out, we’re saving money by making food at home. But by eating at home, we’re missing out on the convenience of having a meal cooked for us, and of not having to clean it up afterwards.
Another dilemma arises when we’re always trying to make the right decision. In one sense, the right decision can mean trying to make one that will always yield a positive result–one that will guarantee us being happy. In another sense, it can mean a decision that has more pros than cons–one that seems logically right or that seems right at the moment at least. The problem is that we don’t always know the consequences of that decision further down the road–the chain reaction of events that follow, which can lead to complications or even harder decisions. It’s similar in movies when they describe the consequences of time travel, how one change in the past can lead to a butterfly effect, resulting in unpredictable or even catastrophic outcomes in the future. For example, by fixing something in the past that in hindsight is negative, will that fix the future, or merely change it?
We can struggle with small decisions, like not eating out, or big ones, like whether a particular job or career path is right for us. Accepting one job or another can be based on factors such as wage/salary, the commute to and from work, the workload, our personal fulfillment, etc. We might choose a job that sounds right for us, but in a month or two, things can change, and maybe the way things are run can change as well. Or it might be that even though the wage/salary is high, the hours are long, which can lead to tiredness, stress, etc. Or it might be that the job isn’t what we expected it to be . . .
If we had a crystal ball and could see the future of each decision we could make, could we settle on one decision–one path to take? Isn’t there always one decision that is better than the next? Or would it be a matter of choosing the one that will make our lives easier, the one that will make us the happiest? But when everything gets easier, it takes more to make us happy. And if it takes more to make us happy, then the happiness we thought we had will slowly slip away since we’re never content with what we have.
Every hard decision we make is a step toward trying to make progress, whether that is progress in happiness, achievement, or wealth. But the more progress we make, the higher and more challenging the next the goal has to be. And with that, comes harder decisions that don’t always pan out the way we expect them to. In fact, some decisions might even set us back, and we have to work our way back up from where we slipped down.
Since all of our decisions cannot be perfect (or right one hundred percent of the time), it comes down to accepting the fact that each decision we make has no guarantees, and because we’re human with a finite understanding of the world, we can only make approximations (or educated guesses) to get where we want to be. But sometimes, when our reason seems doubtful, we follow our intuition or instinct (our sixth sense).