Making Tough Choices
Tools for making any Decisions
HEART – Your choice must fit in with your most positive emotions and avoid negative ones.
EGO – Your decision must match who you are as a person.
HEAD – Your decision must accord with your long-term goals.
SURROUNDINGS – Your decision must be compatible with the situation you find yourself in.
When 1 or more of the tools are at odds, then what?
Good decisions feel expansive and optimistic. They’re not based in fear, anger, or greed.
Successful choicemaking depends much more on who you are than what you do so if your decision is compromising who you are it’s ultimately not going to be the right choice. This can become a challenge is when someone else is involved.
What can you do when your decision involves others whose opinion is different or even opposing?
And when that difference comes down to a core belief belief about love self-worth safety and feeling a whole conflict resolution can become difficult.
If one partner is prioritizing money where another is prioritizing lifestyle or one person needs adventure where another prefers stability, who gets their way?
Listen, list make, leave it
Have a conversation when you have plenty of time in a place that is free of distractions.
- Each partner takes a turn to explain why their choice is best for themselves. (E.g. I want to live in the suburbs because we can have a bigger house for less money and the schools are better.)
- Each partner takes a turn to explain why they think their choice is best for their partner. (E.g. Our mortgage would be smaller so you could work less overtime and we would be in the same place financially. You wOuld see the kids more)
- Each partner suggests a compromise. (We could live in a townhouse close to your office and get rid of one car or we could move midway between your work and the suburbs)
LIST MAKE
Make a pro and con list together. Tally up your pluses and minuses.
The rule- things can only make the list that you both agree on.
Example- Choosing between public school and private school.
small class size
cutting edge facility
uniforms
strong preparation for college
cost
not in our neighborhood
feels elitist (only to one partner)
better sports teams (debatable by one partner)
better University Counselling (debatable by one partner)
Take Turns
I choose to live in the country over the city but you get to choose our house.
A thought from Brene Brown…
Write down what you imagine will happen if you don’t get your way. Quite often this can help to uncover fear that is lurking below our rational thinking and hijacking our ability to see the other person’s perspective.