THE ED MYLETT SHOW - My Blueprint for Making Tough Decisions
Episode Date: June 19, 2025Are you letting indecision rob you of your destiny? In this episode, I’m getting real about something every one of us faces—but few of us feel truly prepared for: making difficult decisions. I wa...lk you through the exact strategies that have helped me choose clarity over chaos in my life, even when the stakes were high and the path ahead was uncertain. Whether you’re wrestling with a career move, a relationship choice, or any other major crossroad, this conversation will help you stop hesitating and start calling your shots. I share personal stories—like the time I chose to stay in California for my family’s well-being, sacrificing millions financially, and later, why I made the move to Florida when life’s conditions shifted. These weren’t easy calls, but they taught me that not choosing is a choice in itself—one that can quietly steal your future. You’ll hear how I separate emotion from logic, why stillness is key, and how to stop letting fear, ego, or the opinions of others dictate your path. This episode is all about owning your choices, even when you’re unsure of the outcome. I give you practical tools like the “10-10-10” rule, values-based decision making, and the importance of internal alignment over external pressure. And if you’re struggling right now, let me remind you: everything’s going to be okay. Trust yourself, trust in God’s guidance, and know that your destiny is shaped by the decisions you make today. Key takeaways from this episode: Why clarity comes from action, not endless thinking How to separate emotion from true inner guidance when making decisions The importance of aligning choices with your highest values, not ego or external validation Why it’s okay—and smart—to change your mind as new information arises How to live with your decisions, learn from them, and move forward with confidence If this resonates with you, I ask just one thing: share this episode. Help someone else take that next step toward the life they deserve. 👉 SUBSCRIBE TO ED'S YOUTUBE CHANNEL NOW 👈 → → → CONNECT WITH ED MYLETT ON SOCIAL MEDIA: ← ← ← ➡️ INSTAGRAM ➡️FACEBOOK ➡️ LINKEDIN ➡️ X ➡️ WEBSITE Get my exclusive Monday Motivation training in GrowthDay, the world’s #1 app for advanced mindset and personal development. Visit https://growthday.com/ed. This show is sponsored by GrowthDay. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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This is The Admirement Show.
Alright, hey everybody, welcome back to the show.
So today I want to talk about something we all face, but we rarely feel ready for and that is making difficult
decisions. You know, we get questions submitted to the show often saying would
Ed please cover this topic and over and over and over again we're getting so
many people saying would Ed please cover how to make decisions. I have a major
decision come up, I have a difficult decision coming up. Does that have a
framework for making decisions? And so
today we're going to talk about that thing we rarely feel ready for, but that
we need to be ready for, which is making difficult decisions. Whether it's leaving
a job or ending a relationship, maybe it's pivoting a business, or just
choosing between two options. Maybe two good ones, maybe two feel bad. You know,
how do you make a decision where both roads don't look good?
Or maybe both do look good.
So tough decisions, they test us and they stir up a lot of things in us.
Don't they?
When you have to make a decision that stirs up fear.
I know I've had that.
You can start to doubt yourself and that nagging.
What if, what if I make a mistake?
What if I called the wrong shot?
Right.
And it all kind of rattles around and ruminates in our head.
And we almost get analysis paralysis in making decisions.
And if there's one thing I would say
that I've really gotten good at the last 25 years
of my life or so is really making decisions.
I actually have a strategy, I have a process,
I have a philosophy about deciding things
and it serves me pretty well.
I've made bad ones, believe me, but I've actually learned from those.
And I kind of know what takes place when I've made bad ones and might be able to
save you a bunch of time because I'm going to point some of those things out
today as well.
So how do we face those choices with clarity instead of anxiety when they come
up? Because we need the better you, you know,
when you're having fear and doubt and concern and frustration or procrastination that is not from God. That's the enemy. If you
believe in frequency and vibration and I also believe in that I'm just a Christian so I believe
everything great comes from God and bad things come from the enemy but I also believe in energy
and I can tell you that it's very low vibrational frequency
when you're operating out of doubt. When you make a decision out of doubt or despair or discouragement
or anxiety or fear, that's a low vibrational frequency decision. A high vibrational frequency
decision is one where you're making it out of clarity and confidence and not needing to be right
by the way.
I want to teach you today how to go into making a decision and it's okay. Even if you're wrong.
So I want to walk you through the way I make decisions and also why decisions
can feel so heavy, how to navigate through them and what to do once the choice is
made.
So you guys ready?
This is gonna be a good one.
Let's get into it.
And by the way, I just want to say this to you.
I put out all this content.
A lot of you say, why do you put out so much detailed content that like other
people charge for on a course or whatever, because I want to help you.
And I also just ask this, the only payment back is share the show, share the
episodes so that the show grows and we reach more people and more people lead
lives that they're worthy of.
Because I believe when there's more people on the planet leaving a worthy life,
the best life they possibly can, the world's better.
And that's the ripple effect of the little tiny thing I'm doing right here.
So here we go.
The art of making difficult decisions.
I'm calling it the clarity in chaos.
And I'm going to give you a 12 thoughts, totally disconnected thoughts as I normally do.
Thought number one, your decisions shape your destiny.
Clarity comes from action, not thought.
So when you're sitting around,
you got a decision to make,
you're like, that's gotta think about it more,
think about it more, think about it more.
Actually, that's not where clarity comes from.
Clarity comes from taking an action.
And so one thing I'm gonna tell you is don't think so so much. See I believe the separation is in the preparation. You
gotta prepare. But at some point in life you gotta call the shot. You gotta be a
shot caller. You gotta learn to take the heat if you're wrong, to apologize if
you're wrong, to make a course correction, to pivot. But the people that live the
best lives, they've developed the ability to make decisions.
And like I'm gonna say later in the podcast, the truth is not making a decision is a decision.
Not choosing is a choice.
So clarity does not come from thinking about something over and over again and getting
every piece of information you need, although you should get that.
Clarity comes from action.
Let me give you an example of one decision that I was a major one.
I was faced with making about eight, 10 years ago, and it was to move my family.
We lived in Southern California.
I had grown up in Southern California.
Our family was there, meaning our parents were there.
Our kids were enrolled in school.
But the fact of the matter was financially, it was a terrible idea for me to live in California.
I was paying millions of dollars a year in taxes. I didn't see those taxes going to very good use. Housing was getting crazy.
I'm in a businesses, all my businesses, I can pretty much live where I want to and
so I wasn't locked down to a physical location and I had to really weigh some
different things and whether we were gonna move and here's what I knew, either way it was gonna be okay.
But it was a major life and family decision.
It would impact my mom and dad,
it would impact my children,
it would impact my spouse, it would impact friends,
it would impact business to some extent.
And so I had to weigh things.
And the other part of it, why not go?
Well, my kids were in school.
They had deep friendships. You know, they weren't in kindergarten or first grade anymore. They
were getting ready to, you know, middle school and high school. And I had to
evaluate what does that do to my children and the needs of my wife and my
children. And they wanted to stay. And ultimately, I'm gonna teach you how I
came to this decision in a minute, but I decided to stay until my children graduated school and sacrifice the
financial for the family.
And sometimes that's just what you got to weigh those things, but it was, it
was a eight figure decision to my detriment, but I made an investment in the
joy and peace of mind of my family as well.
And I'm going to show you how I made this decision.
It wasn't just in my head, right, in a minute.
Then about 10 years later, the decision revisited.
Circumstances and conditions changed.
And now it was, should we leave?
My kids had left.
They were in college.
And now the decision changed. It was a greater financial impact,
but I didn't have the family part weighing on me. But I still had my mom there. My dad had passed
away. My mother-in-law was there. My sisters are all there. It was a difficult decision. My nieces
and nephews mainly were all there. Most all of my great friends were there versus moving.
But moving meant other things, new experience,
a new way of life.
Certainly financially it would be better to live
where I ended up moving to Florida.
And I almost felt like I had already lived that life,
if that makes any sense.
Like I had done it.
I had grown up there, I had lived there.
Did I wanna live another 20 years
in essentially the same chapter, the same place?
And then the conclusion that I made was the upside outweighed the downside and we made the decision to move.
And then all the things that come with that move. When do you do it? Where do you go?
But it was a major life decision and I made it seamlessly.
And I don't think it did hurt the family much. I don't think it did. It helped financially.
It didn't hurt business. It helped business. It helped peace of mind.
And it's kind of started the dream machine again in my life.
The point making to you is conditions change and so then did the decision.
That was one major decision I was faced with.
Now number two, how do you do that?
Be aligned with your higher self over simply doing the right thing.
And so what I always ask myself when I'm making decisions is does this align with the higher me?
Is the higher me more about the money
that I'd saved by moving
or is the higher me sacrificing for my children?
And at that time it was the sacrifice for my children.
The higher me called me to make the decision rather easily.
Now, was there times I regretted it? Sure.
But I think I made the right one.
Later, a decade later, when
that same decision visited myself and I asked would the higher me do this, the higher me couldn't
find reasons that it somehow violated my morals, my principles, what I truly value in my life.
Higher self means does it align with the things you value the most? And so anytime I have a decision,
I ask myself does it align with the values that I hold to be the most precious in my life? And in my life, it was my family,
it was my, my, my children, my faith, the church we were connected to those things.
And when those things weren't the same variable, I was able to make a different decision. So
here's a way to word it for yourself. You could write down. Does this decision honor who you truly are?
Not who you're trying to please or impress,
but who you truly are.
So any decision I make, I just ask myself,
does this honor, does this decision,
if I make this one, does it honor who I truly am?
Not who I'm trying to impress or please other people,
but what matters to me?
See, this starts to give you a true north.
It gives you a sense of clarity that I was referring to.
And by the way, I'm gonna give you 12 things.
So maybe this thing I'm giving you now
doesn't apply to the decision you need to make,
but something will of the 12.
I can promise you that today.
It's why I always give you everything that I can.
But does this decision honor who I truly am
and not worrying about who it pleases or disappoints or impresses because those things are useless in making a decision
whether to buy a watch or a car or
Anything you have leave your job leave a relationship
Does it honor who you truly are?
Because if you're buying it to impress other people that's stupid
truly are because if you're buying it to impress other people, that's stupid.
If you're trying to please other people by not staying or staying somewhere, or what are people going to think if you leave your job or your career or your
relationship, you're not making the decision for the right reasons.
Get above it.
Does this decision honor who I truly am and what I truly value?
That starts to give you much more clarity and eliminate who will please who it
will impress because that's irrelevant.
Okay, this is good. Third, why decisions feel difficult? Why do they feel difficult? We make
them well, we have a fear of regret. Don't we? What if I make the wrong one, which I'm going to
address a little bit later? Fear of regret. It's a big part of life. Living in regret. Number two,
fear of judgment, judgment from others, but, fear of judgment. Judgment from others,
but actually even of yourself. I have made decisions that later I regretted and I judged
myself. You dummy, you should have known better. How did you not see that coming? Right? So
because it's happened before, it could happen again. So you have these fears that build up,
they're difficult because you could regret it. You could have judgment of yourself. Other people could judge you. Next thing is this, uncertainty and
incomplete information. Decisions are difficult because you're never gonna have
all the information. You're never gonna be completely certain. People say I was
totally certain. No you weren't. You're not totally certain of anything. You
don't know what's gonna happen to you in the next 10 minutes or anybody around
you. There's no such thing as complete certainty and so when you're searching
for that,
if that's the measuring stick of,
I need to be completely certain before I make a decision,
you are never going to make any decisions in your life.
Well, I might regret this,
and you're worried about regret.
You're never gonna make a decision
because there's gonna be some you regret.
As long as you learn from it, that's different.
And by the way, if you're worried about being judged
by other people or yourself,
you are never going to make a decision because you are going to regret some of them, you are
going to be judged, and you're never going to have total certainty.
Anybody tells you, I'm totally sure this is what we should do.
No, you're pretty sure.
You're reasonably sure.
You're more sure you should than you shouldn't, but you're not completely sure.
And you're never going to have all the information.
You can't.
So you got to learn to deal with that.. You gotta learn to deal with the unknown.
It was this great story that Carl Edwards told me, the NASCAR driver.
We used to sponsor him and he was a top driver for a long time.
I said, what's the most difficult thing about driving a NASCAR?
He goes, Ed, it's when there's a crash in front of you and there's all this smoke
and you gotta drive 160 miles an hour, 180 miles an hour through that smoke
and you don't know what's on the other side.
You'd think, ah, slow down, you can't do that because if you slow
down you get rear-ended for sure from a guy doing 180 behind you. So the hardest
part of driving is when there's a crash there's smoke you can't see, you don't
know what's on the other side of that smoke. You got to drive through that smoke
relying on your ability to innovate, improvise, change and frankly fate when
you get to the other side, your preparation.
And the other side, you don't know at the end of that smoke there's not four cars right there
you're going to hit head on, or something you're going to hit that's going to flip you up in the
air and spill, it's been 18 times into a wall. You don't know if on the other end of that smoke
you're not dead. And sometimes you get to the other end of that smoke and it's smooth sailing,
there was nothing to worry about. Sometimes making decisions is you're gonna drive through the smoke
and the people that are willing to drive through the smoke they become the pros
they become the champions because you're not gonna have all the information. All
you can do is get the information you're capable of getting, evaluate it, call the
shot. That's why decisions are difficult. Number four, what's the anatomy of
making a difficult decision? Okay I'm gonna give you the anatomy. Number four, what's the anatomy of making a difficult
decision? Okay, I'm gonna give you the anatomy. Number one, emotion versus logic.
Okay, let me give you a couple insights from a 54 year old guy. I no longer make
decisions when I'm emotional. Period. End of story. When I'm really high and
excited and happy, I don't make decisions and when I'm really low, down, angry, frustrated, mad, disillusioned, I don't
make them then either. Typically speaking, when emotion is high, logic is
low. I want to make a logical decisions. That doesn't mean that we don't make
some decisions in our life emotionally and then rationalize them logically. In
fact, a lot of people buy things that way.
You kind of figure out emotionally, I'd feel this,
if I had that, I'd look this way, blah, blah, blah, blah,
you have this emotional and then you logically reason
and it's less than the other one
and I'll only pay it off over two years.
So a lot of us make decisions emotionally
and rationalize them logically.
But when I'm making decisions now,
I try to take as much emotion out of it as I possibly can. Now that doesn't mean feelings aren't involved. To me
that's a little bit different than emotion. Feelings is what do I feel about
this? What do I feel about that person? That's different than the emotion of
anger or fear. You follow what I'm saying? Feeling love for somebody will help you make decisions that aren't always logical.
And that's okay.
But the emotion of jealousy, you'll never make a good decision.
The emotion of fear, the emotion of anxiety, the emotion of worry, the emotion of anger,
the emotion of despair, or the emotion of exhilaration.
That's very different than the feeling of love when you're making a relationship,
right? Or the feeling in your gut that this is the right thing to do.
Feelings are great. Emotions different than that.
And so I try to take emotion out and I rely on logic and how I feel.
Next thing is this, when I'm making a decision,
the long-term impact versus the short-term impact,
what's the impact of this going to be in five minutes?
Five months five years fifty years if it needs to be evaluated that way. What's the long term versus the short-term impact and
Then this you're always navigating these things internal alignment
versus external pressure Internal alignment versus external pressure.
Internal alignment, external pressure. And for me, I want to rely on my internal
alignment, not external pressure. When I've made decisions under external
pressure, I've made bad ones. You ever have somebody say, hey, if you can't
buy this right now, you're gonna lose the deal. That's external pressure. You usually make a bad decision.
Or external pressure of what someone's going to think.
Or someone forcing you into a timeline that you don't want.
The external pressure that if you do this,
what's it going to impact this thing externally?
I think through my internal alignment as opposed
to the external pressure.
What are my parents going to think?
What are my friends going to think? What are my friends going to think?
What's the world going to think?
What's it going to do this?
I let go of that.
Number five, let go of ego driven choices.
If fear control and external validation is influencing your decision.
I encourage you to release that when you trust in yourself, you trust
in that wisdom that created you. Let me say that to you trust in yourself, you trust in that wisdom that created you.
Let me say that to you again. If fear is driving your decision, you're in trouble,
control, or any external validation. It's almost always a dumb decision.
I could list for you the amount of bad decisions I've made.
And almost all of them were for some sort of external validation, fear of what other
people were going to think, control or something ego driven.
Ego, by the way, sometimes can be to get attention.
Ego sometimes can be to prove yourself.
Ego can be emotion.
And I want to operate on logic and feeling.
And so when you trust in you, you're trusting in the wisdom that created you.
I'm going to talk later about trusting in God. That's what I mean by trusting you. I'm going to
elaborate on that at the very end. It's step 12, spoiler alert, of course, with me. But you also
got to trust yourself. What's your intuition telling you? What's your discernment telling you?
What's your gut telling you? See, if I make a decision and it goes the
wrong way, but I did it based on my internal dialogue, my internal clock, my
internal compass, my internal belief systems, aligns with who I am, I've prayed
about it, I've looked introspectively, I've trusted my gut and I got it wrong, I
can live with that.
But when I make a decision that was out of ego
or fear or anger or jealousy or emotion
or I hope I can get attention from this
or what are other people gonna think about me
and then it goes wrong, that's hard to live with.
So I wanna make sure the framework of the decision I make
is right so that I can live with it that's wrong.
But you imagine making a decision out of ego or anger which we've all done in our life or
Ecstasy or joy or euphoria or some bizarre emotion that's taking place at the time or when we're really down
think about the millions of people
That have decided to end their own lives in the moment they were down.
The worst possible decision they could make in their life, they made when they were down.
You'd never make that same decision if you were up or in the middle.
You'd never make that decision if it aligned.
What about anybody who's done something to harm another person in a really terrible way?
Crimes of passion.
It's almost always out of emotion.
Crimes of passion aren't just violent crimes in our society.
We commit crimes of passion on ourselves often in the way we treat ourselves or the decisions
we make.
Passion about somebody that logically you know isn't good for you.
They don't treat you well.
They're not earnest with you. They don't tell you the truth, but you commit a crime of passion and stay
with them or decide to get into a relationship or have a child with them.
Or you in a workplace where they mistreat you or they don't do things
ethically as a company that even are aligned with who you are but you work
there because they give you a big paycheck. It's a poor decision. It'll
eventually bite you. We've kept people in businesses I have that I knowingly knew weren't good people, but
they were really productive.
And eventually that was a crime of passion.
They should have been let go.
And they eventually let themselves go or get fired and make a big mistake when they do.
So make the decision out of alignment for yourself.
You can live with it if you're wrong.
But when it's the other, it's hard to live with
ever.
No crimes of passion on yourself or your own life.
Certainly never other people.
And by the way, I'm not equating a violent crime with a dumb decision.
I'm giving you a metaphor.
So you're probably smart enough to know when something isn't working.
And for me, when I'm off, even my cognitive function, I always kind of decide what's going on with my gut. So
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So I gotta tell you something,
I've done a pretty good job with my kids in a few areas and some not so good in others,
but the one I did a great job on was when it comes to money.
But I gotta tell you something, it would have been a whole lot easier if we had Greenlight.
Greenlight is a debit card and money app made for families.
It helps kids learn how to save, invest, and spend money wisely.
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Greenlight app has things like a chores feature where you can set up one-time or recurring
chores.
Reward the kids with an allowance for a job well done.
It's so great.
They learn the value of money and it's fun and it's gamified.
I wish I had it when I was a kid and I wish I had it when my kids were young, but yours
can and you can.
It's easy and it's a convenient way for parents to help their kids learn money stuff and budgets.
That's why millions of parents and kids are already learning about it.
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So start your risk-free Greenlight trial today at greenlight.com.
slash ed. That's greenlight.com.
slash ed to get started. greenlight.com.
slash ed. Number six, stillness reveals truth. The
power of silence and meditation and accessing divine guidance is so powerful.
Remember this, the quiet mind is where clarity lives. Get quiet, get away from
the noise, get alone, get prayerful. Empty your mind, take a walk.
Yes, walking is exercise.
Doesn't build muscle, but it's exercise.
The quiet mind is where clarity lives.
Walking is great exercise for the soul, for the body and for the mind.
I don't try to make any significant decisions until my mind is quiet and quiet repeatedly.
By the way, a little rule of thumb for me is when I really wanted to buy something that I knew was stupid, I just wait a month to see if I still wanted a month from now. And 99 out of 100 times
a month later, that stupid desire, that crime of passion I wanted to have to buy that thing or that
blah blah blah that people will think I'm amazing when I have goes away and
logic sets in the quiet mind is where clarity lives. If you want to make a clear decision,
quiet your mind, get away from the noise and only make the decision out of a quiet place,
not a loud place. So instead of pushing or forcing a decision,
try listening to what your inner guidance is saying beneath the noise.
I really believe the answer is there.
I really do.
Get quiet.
Slow down.
Take the emotion away.
Get away.
Mentally.
The answer is there.
You'll get the inner guidance.
Number seven.
Here's a decision-making toolkit
for you. Okay, here we go. The 10-10-10 rule. How will I feel about this decision
in 10 minutes, 10 months, or 10 years? Earlier I said five minutes, etc. But a
framework that I'll often use depending on the magnitude of the decision. Ten
minutes from now, how will I feel about this decision? Ten months from now, ten
years from now. Next, values-based decision
making. Does this align with who I want to be? Maybe it's not just who you are
currently, but who you aspire to. You may say right now I don't like me very much,
or right now I've made other mistakes. So yeah, it does align. I make, I've made a
bunch of stupid choices. This is just another one. Know who you want to be. If
you don't feel good about who you are right now, you go that alignment with who I am, I'm capable of making a bad decision. How about aligning it with who you want to be. If you don't feel good about who you are right now, you
go that alignment with who I am, I'm capable of making a budget. How about aligning it
with who you want to be? Or by the way, what would the person you admire most in their
life in your life do about this decision? What would so and so do? It's not a bad thing.
Many times in my life since he's passed away, I've asked myself, what would my dad do here? What would dad do? Because it's just, it's, it's the barometer. So values based
decision making. Next, you got to understand the difference between reversible versus irreversible
decisions. There's a framework for it. You can go look at it. Bezos has this great thing
type type one versus type two framework. But for me, I just asked just asked myself is this reversible it's kind of like booking a flight I'm
gonna go on Thursday but it's a cancelable reversible ticket transferable
ticket okay that's one level of a decision one where there's no cancellation
involved and that's it that's a different level of scrutiny reversible
versus irreversible and then the last one of the framework here is the gut
check not the last of the podcast just the gut the last one of the framework here is the gut check, not the last of the podcast, just the gut, the last one under this level, the gut check.
How do you feel when you imagine having already chosen it?
In other words, project forward.
You made the decision.
How's it feel?
You can actually do that.
You can project forward.
I called the shot to leave the company, sit in it for a minute.
How's this feel?
I called the shot to enter this relationship with this person. Sit in it. How's it feel? I called
the shot to move to Florida. Sit in it for a minute. How's it feel? And then ask
yourself, what do I want and what am I afraid of? At some point you've got to
get honest with yourself when you're making a decision. What is it that you
want and what are you afraid of? And like shake yourself up a little bit. When it
starts to happen, change your physiology. Go work out, go take a
walk, go lift, go stretch. Because when you change your physiology, what do I want and what am I
really afraid of? And when you start to put that out there and you're really honest with yourself,
name the fear. What is it that you're afraid of? I'm afraid they're going to think this,
like get really honest. Is this fear a fact or is it a feeling? Am I afraid of falling or failing or am I afraid of success?
Like get real, maybe somebody afraid of success.
I don't relate to that one, but I mean, but I'm afraid of success.
Really?
Are you, well, what are you afraid of?
Name it, say it, put it out there, get above it.
Let's put some light on the boogeyman.
Right.
You'll figure out really quick whether that boogeyman's for real or not.
Okay.
It's really important to name the fear and to take action because
action is where the decision is made.
Number eight, here's some common traps to avoid.
Man, I feel like I'm overwhelming you with info today, but here we go.
Number one, overthinking analysis paralysis.
You could just overthink.
Most of you do.
I've done it.
Don't overthink it.
Get the info, call the shot, move on with your life.
You'll be okay.
Really, you'll be okay.
In fact, the most successful people I know
are the best decision makers.
They process information quickly, they call the shot,
they move on, they live with the results.
They call the shot, they move on, they live with the results
because they can pivot, they can adjust,
they'll figure it out.
Because here's the deal, what if they could both work?
You know most of the time in my life, they both work.
You know the truth, had I stayed in California, probably would have worked.
Moved to Florida, probably worked.
Had you stayed at that company, it might have worked.
Had you left, it probably worked.
Most things are.
It's not this, it's this fallacy like good, you know like, if I make the wrong decision.
Why don't you rely on your ability and God's blessing and grace that you know like they make the wrong decision once you rely on your
ability and God's blessing and grace that you know probably both work give you a lot
more confidence making the decision okay so common traps to avoid overthinking outsourcing
your power number one letting other people decide for you I don't do that I don't ask
for a lot of advice and when I do they're still not making the decision I'm just getting
their advice so don't make the mistake of overthinking.
Don't outsource your power
and have other people make decisions for you.
Third, don't ignore your intuition entirely.
You can't rely completely on intuition, but don't ignore it.
If something's screaming at you,
like really screaming at you inside, listen to it.
If it's whispering, listen to it as well.
And then the last trap to avoid, waiting
too long. Sometimes a right decision made immediately with authority and conviction
is better than a timid decision made later, even if it were right. Let me say that to
you again. Sometimes deciding and vehemently, aggressively executing your plan, even if
it might not have been the perfect decision, is better than waiting longer and then timidly making the perfect decision.
Don't wait too long.
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Now, nine. How do you live with your decision? Own it, even if it's imperfect. Own it. Just own it. It's okay.
perfect. Own it. Just own it. It's okay. Great people make bad decisions. They own it. You know what else they do? Learn from it. I'm here today making better
decisions in my life because I've learned from a bunch of stupid ones. I've
made dumb investments. I've trusted the wrong people. I've done... that's not even
the beginning of the list. I've just done dumb things and I've learned from it
and I don't repeat it.
And so sometimes that bad decision is a blessing
because you learned a lesson way more valuable
than the pain it caused.
I've lost a lot of money and some stupid investments
and you know what?
I have more money because I didn't repeat that mistake
and maybe I would have made a really catastrophic one
had I not learned on the mid-size ones.
And then here's the other thing,
reassess when new information arises. You know, I used to not want to change my mind a lot because
I thought leaders need to be consistent in their thinking. You know what I've realized
in my life? Great leaders say, well, hold on a minute, I got it wrong. Or I've got more
information now, I've changed my mind. It's okay to change your mind. In fact, that's
what smart people do. Smart people say I've learned something.
I've got more information.
I now know things I didn't know.
I'm changing my mind.
It's a good thing.
Not allowed to say that in politics in the world.
Like you imagine a politician going, whoops, got it wrong.
Sorry.
I've got more information now.
Now I'm going to get it right.
I'd follow that politician through wall, but no one can say it because we get
punished for changing our mind in the world today. And so it's
okay to change your mind. In fact, you should. In fact, if you haven't changed
your mind about something in the last five or ten years, what were you doing
living a life that you didn't learn any new information? You haven't changed your
opinion about anything? Like, actually reflect on that. I haven't changed my mind
about anything the last five or 10 years.
I would say to you, you're not so smart.
I've changed my mind about a lot of things.
I'd like to change my mind about some more.
Somebody get more information.
I'm not right about everything.
In fact, the older I've gotten, do you know what I realized?
I know very little.
When I was young and in my twenties and thirties, I thought I knew everything,
even my forties.
And now as I've aged a little bit and gotten older, I realize I don't know that much.
In fact, there's way more I don't know than I do know.
And what's good about that is it helps me be curious.
It takes pressure off of me.
No one knows anything.
Let me say something to you.
Most people are just winging their way through this life, including the most successful ones
you make from one mistake, one decision to the next,
just trying to grow.
The smart ones learn.
The smart ones have courage to call shots.
The smart ones know,
I could probably make them both work eventually.
God'll probably make it work both ways.
Okay?
But the fact of the matter is, most people are winging it.
There's no magic sauce.
No one has all the answers.
There's no playbook.
Okay? And I'm telling you, the top people in the world have all been on my show. You know what they
all have in common? They're winging it. They're making most of it up as they go. They're learning
from one to the next. The great ones don't make the same mistakes multiple times. But no one has
this all figured out. As a dad, I made mistakes all the time.
I mean, can you imagine that?
So I'm never going to have kids because I might make a mistake?
No, overall, I'm going to get better and better and better.
Number 10.
What do people do to get it?
Number one, they don't operate on that false premise
that only one of the decisions is right.
It's a false premise.
That's the enemy trying to get you to pucker up
and not make any decision. Number two, they trust their inner compass. Let me say this to you.
There's strength in choosing. Even when it's hard, it takes strength to choose. You'll be
stronger for choosing. Call a shot. Make the decision. Remember this, I said earlier, not
choosing. It's a choice. When you're not choosing and you're not deciding, you're choosing.
In fact, here's what you're choosing.
I said in the very beginning, your decisions shape your destiny.
When you don't make the decisions you need to make in your life, when you
just delay them and delay them, and you're afraid and afraid and afraid,
what gets robbed is the world.
What gets robbed is you because you'll never achieve your destiny.
If for you to achieve your destiny, you're going to have to make a series
of difficult decisions in your life
and live with the consequences.
And by the way, get a few wrong and learn from those.
It's all progression.
Here's the good news.
It all ends in the same place.
It all ends in the same place.
Can I say something to you as a friend?
And I know this is empty because I don't know your situation,
but I actually do know your situation because
I've got a relationship with my Savior everything's gonna be okay everything's gonna be okay right before you make the
decision just tell yourself that everything's gonna be okay everything's
gonna be okay number 11 there are no mistakes only lessons every path is the
right path if it leads you back to yourself.
You know what you gotta do? Detach from the outcome.
Call the shot and detach from the outcome. You can't control the outcome, you can only control the decision, you can control the work you do.
There's this great quote by Tao Te Ching. Do your work, then step back. That's the only path to serenity.
Do your work, make your decision, then step back, detach from the outcome. That's
the path to serenity. Once you made a decision from alignment, release control
over what happens next. You made the decision the right way, from the right
place, with the right framework, with the right heart, and the right way from the right place with the right framework with the right heart and the right mind for the right reasons.
And it probably both will work out anyway.
And if it doesn't, you can look at yourself in the mirror and go,
I did it right. I just got it wrong.
And that's okay. Everything's going to be okay.
And then number 12, pray about it.
Pray about it. Pray about it.
Get prayerful, whatever your faith is.
Pray about it.
I'm a Christian, so I rely on scriptures that I read.
But when I have a decision to make, I pray like that move I made.
Like whether I continue doing this podcast, like all kinds of
decisions I make in my life.
Proverbs 3, verse five and six says,
"'Trust in the Lord with all your heart,
and lean not on your own understanding,
and all your ways acknowledge Him,
and He will make your paths straight.'"
Can I just say that one to you again,
even if you're not a believer?
Just feels good, huh?
"'Trust in the Lord with all your heart
and lean not on your own understanding.
And all your ways acknowledge Him
and He will make your paths straight.
Feels good, huh?
Feels good. It'll be all right.
James 1 verse 5,
if any of you lacks wisdom, let him ask God
who gives generously to all without reproach,
and it will be given to him. James 1 5, if any of you lacks wisdom, let him ask God
who gives generously to all without reproach, and it will be given him.
It's all going to be okay. Ask God, get some confirmation.
And I can tell you that I think a great life is a person who makes great decisions.
I really do believe it shapes your destiny.
I took a lot of time today on this one for you because I know at least one piece of it
fits something you're deciding right now.
And I think you should use this as a resource for any decisions you make because it'll fit
the piece that's next.
Maybe all of it fits.
I don't know.
But I actually did this today with
you in mind and just sharing with you my own experiences in my life. I don't know if you're
going to call the right shot. I kind of figure both of them will probably work out. But even if
they don't, as long as you make the decisions the way I've described here, you can live with it.
And the good news is, is at the end of your life, it all ends up in the same place anyway.
But if you make the right decisions for the right reasons, I believe you end up meeting your destiny because that's what
shapes it. All right everybody, I hope today was good. I was excited to do this
one with you and I feel great about it. So if you enjoyed it, please share it
with anybody you love or care about or believe in. Anybody at work, anybody at
church, anybody on a team, any families you care about. And then I'd encourage
you to be on my email list, by the way if you're about, and then I'd encourage you to be
on my email list by the way if you're not go to EdMylett.com and get on my
email list so you get the podcast a little bit early. God bless you.
Max out.
This is the Ed Mylin Show.