The Decision Paralysis Handbook: A Practical Guide to Making Confident Choices Without Overthinking Everything
The Decision Paralysis Handbook: A Practical Guide to Making Confident Choices Without Overthinking Everything
By Capra Academy · Published June 16, 2026 · 131 pages
About This Book
A practical guide to overcoming analysis paralysis and decision fatigue. Covers the psychology of indecision, satisficing vs maximizing, decision-making frameworks, and strategies for building confidence in your choices.
What’s Inside
- Satisficing vs Maximizing
- Decision-Making Frameworks
- Choice Overload Reduction
- Fear of Regret Management
- Perfectionism and Decisions
- Quick Decision Techniques
Frequently Asked Questions
What is decision paralysis?
Decision paralysis (analysis paralysis) is the inability to make a decision due to overthinking, fear of making the wrong choice, or being overwhelmed by options. It is closely related to perfectionism, anxiety, and ADHD.
What is the difference between satisficing and maximizing?
Satisficers choose the first option that meets their criteria. Maximizers seek the best possible option. Research shows satisficers are generally happier with their decisions and make them faster. Maximizing leads to paralysis and regret.
How many options is too many?
Research on choice overload shows that beyond 6-10 options, decision quality decreases and satisfaction drops. Reducing options before deciding — using criteria-based elimination — improves both speed and satisfaction.
Why do I struggle with small decisions but not big ones?
Small decisions often feel high-stakes because of perfectionism (‘What if I choose the wrong restaurant?’). Big decisions may feel clearer because the stakes force a more values-based approach. The two-way door test helps: if a decision is reversible, decide quickly.