Stuck in a 'what if' loop? Discover why over-analyzing is just problem-solving gone wrong and how to shift your mindset to take decisive action.

Action is actually a form of information gathering that analysis can never replicate. The goal isn't to be right the first time; the goal is to be less wrong every time you iterate.
Cree par des anciens de Columbia University a San Francisco
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Cree par des anciens de Columbia University a San Francisco

Lena: Miles, have you ever noticed how we treat "overthinking" like it’s this responsible, high-level strategy, when it might actually be a trap? I was thinking about Marcus, a guy who spent years in a soul-draining finance job, paralyzed by "what if" loops. He’d stay up until 2 AM imagining every disaster—the economy tanking, his skills being outdated—and by morning, he’d just go back to the same desk, totally exhausted but having changed absolutely nothing.
Miles: It’s a classic scenario, right? We tell ourselves we’re being cautious, but research actually shows that this kind of rumination is just problem-solving gone wrong. It’s fascinating because while we’re busy "analyzing," we’re actually losing the cognitive bandwidth we need to solve real problems. In fact, studies from the Journal of Applied Psychology suggest that simply framing a task with a direct call to action can boost our persistence by up to 37%.
Lena: That’s a huge jump! So, if the "what if" mind is actually a safety system that’s just misfiring, how do we stop it from stealing our time?
Miles: That is the big question. Let’s explore how we can shift from that paralyzing "what if" to a much more powerful "what now."