ISBN-13: 9783565213412 / Angielski / Miękka / 176 str.
This book explores the often-unexamined pressure to make quick decisions in fast-paced work environments-and how speed can function as avoidance of what slower, more embodied decision-making would surface. It examines how workplace culture celebrates rapid choices as efficiency and leadership while pathologizing deliberation as weakness or overthinking. The text reframes the demand for quick decisions not as professional necessity but as potentially protecting you from recognizing misalignment, burnout signals, or the emotional cost of choices made without genuine consideration.Rather than offering techniques to decide faster or trust your gut more readily, the book explores what quick decision-making can obscure-the ways speed prevents you from noticing how choices feel in your body, whether they actually serve you, or what continuing at this pace costs your nervous system. It examines patterns beneath the pressure for rapid choices: using speed to avoid uncertainty's discomfort, treating every decision as equally urgent, bypassing emotional information that would complicate efficiency. What does your workplace's demand for quick decisions prevent you from acknowledging about fit, sustainability, or your actual needs?Through psychological insight, the text explores the difference between genuine intuitive knowing and speed as avoidance strategy. It examines what actually allows sustainable decision-making versus what creates the illusion of control through rapid choices that ignore embodied wisdom. This explores quick workplace decisions not as skill to master but as potential signal of environments that require you to bypass yourself-and understanding what slower, more integrated decision-making might reveal about alignment.
The pressure to decide quickly at work isn't just about efficiency-sometimes it's about moving too fast to notice what your body knows about misalignment or unsustainability.