Cognitive Load
2 episodes tagged "Cognitive Load".

The Truth About Regret Nobody Tells You!
🎯 How to Make Choices Without Losing Your Damn Mind (aka: Decision-Making for the Chronically Overthinking, Neurodivergent, or Just Plain Tired) Let’s talk solutions. Real ones. Not “manifest your best life” fluff. 🛑 Step 1: Limit Your Options Sheena Iyengar (yeah, the jam study lady) proved that fewer options = more peace. You don’t need 147 choices. You need 3. Just pick 3 restaurants, 3 jobs, 3 shirts, whatever — and choose from there. 📊 Science backs it up: A 2019 study in the Journal of Consumer Research found that cutting options by 50% boosts decision speed and satisfaction. Less thinking, more doing. 🧠 For my ADHD people: this is essential. Too many choices = brain scramble. You’ll either make a reckless decision or avoid it altogether. So limit the damn list. And to my fellow OCD warriors? Set a damn timer. You don’t need a 3-week investigation to pick a taco spot. 🔥 Bottom line: Freedom isn’t more options. It’s fewer, better ones.

Are You Stressed From Too Many Choices?
🔥 More Options = More Regret. Let’s Talk Psychology. 🧠 Swipe right on one date, and now you’re haunted by the 50 you didn’t pick. Sound familiar? Yeah — that’s the cost of being a “maximizer.” (Hi, that’s me. I’m in recovery.) A 2019 study in Psychological Science found that maximizers — people obsessed with finding the perfect choice — are more stressed and less satisfied than “satisficers,” who just pick something good enough and move on. Spoiler alert: satisficers are happier. There’s also a 2020 study in the Journal of Consumer Psychology that showed satisficers make faster decisions and feel better overall. Translation: your coffee order isn’t your personality, and overanalyzing your playlist won’t make your life any deeper. It’ll just give you decision burnout. This is real — cognitive load theory explains that your brain can only juggle so much before it taps out. And every “maybe” is costing you peace of mind. You wanna feel better? ✅ Stop chasing the best ✅ Pick what’s good enough ✅ Move the hell on This isn’t settling — it’s surviving.