Do you suffer from decision fatigue?

Published: Wed, 05/18/16

Hi

You may have heard of Tim Ferriss.

He is famous for the books 'the 4 hr work week' and the '4 hr body'.

As you probably can tell, his whole premise is towards getting the maximum out of the minimum time invested.

The margin created is then free time and energy for you

We use this in many forms in health and fitness:
  • strength coaching: minimum weight lifted for the maximum return in muscle and strength gain. Any more and the risk increases so this is a fine art getting this correct
  • nutrition: maximum nutrition from the calories you consume (this is achieved by REAL, high nutrient value food)
  • speed training: maximum power output for the minimum energy expended. The more efficient your body is at creating power the further and faster you go
Applying this to decision making with reference to behaviour change has been one of the most effective formulae we have seen with our work with clients.

Tim discusses the theory that we have a finite amount of 'hit points' per day with regards to decision making a day.

Whatever intellect, resolve, IQ and age you are we can all eventually get overwhelmed by too many decisions and our 'decision points' dwindled

This then leads to poor choices!

One study done on college students saw one group given a set of choices around some clothes shopping they were asked to do in a store e.g.
  1. What shirt, T shirt or Collar?
  2. What colour?
  3. Jeans or shorts?
  4. and so on...
Another group in the same store were told to just simply go in and have a look about and buy an outfit.

Both groups were then told to put a hand in a bucket of ice to see who could stay in the longest.

This method was chosen as it takes a lot of 'decision hit points' to keep the willpower strong and the hand in the ice.

Although the choices were simple for the first group, the experimenters showed a definite correlation that this group removed their hand much earlier than the second, less decision fatigued group.

Does the below sound familiar?:
  • do you ever notice that you start the day full of resolve to nail the fantastic nutritional choices you have planned out, only to let it slip at the last minute?
  • met a salesman who fires lots of questions at you? Now you know what they are doing!
  • started a new exercise regime and quit as it is too confusing?
  • been online shopping and brought something you shouldn't and not known why...your resolve to not buy drops off per click!
So, how can we counteract decision fatigue?
  • have a set menu for the week: work out a recurring menu with the staple types of food that you buy online.
  • have only healthy snacks to hand in the house and if you want something more naughty you have to DECIDE to go out to buy....you will do this less!
  • when going away pack non perishable healthy foods and plan what you will eat per day
  • plan the first hour of every day out the night before and stick to it.
  • streamline your wardrobe: There is a reason why Simon Cowell and Steve Jobs wear similar clothes day in day out. They have minimised their wardrobe to reduce the toll on their decision 'points' so they have reserve for later
  • de-clutter your house: mess is stress!
  • create a budget and stick to it: not just a money saving tip, it will spread out extravagance to planned spends such as holidays, larger items and investment in yourself
  • set up a MUST DO list of 3 things that will drive you, your family or business forward and do this before any other agenda comes in DAILY
  • move all bills to online and automate where possible.
  • Set diary entries for when insurance needs renewal or the power meter read. Knowing you don't have to think about when you need to do this frees up masses of headspace.
  • can you get a virtual assistant?
  • use Evernote or suchlike app with a note for all your projects. I use this religiously. I have a box for PT, Sales, Calls, admin and so on and when something comes in I add a tick box into the relevant note section. I then block time in my diary to tackle these e,g, between 10 and 11 am Friday is spreadsheet admin time, 11am to 12 noon team calls etc
  • have a mission statement or filter that you run things through. We use 'does what I'm about to do take me closer too or further from my health goals?' which makes the decision for us most of the time!
Obviously we need to make decisions, however make sure that you save your 'hit points' for the big ones,

J


James Chandler
Personal Trainer
07870 262741
www.eatwellandworkout.com


'To inspire, educate and support our clients on their journey to better health'