
Anonymous wrote:pp again. For example, I'd live with the desk just fine. I'm not picky. So maybe that helps.
Anonymous wrote:I became this way by watching my mother who couldn't decide anything beyond what to make for dinner. If it was "where do you want to go for dinner?" she'd spend an hour and a half thinking as her two young children got progressively hungrier and more poorly behaved before my father snapped and made an executive decision, then she'd claim to get "sick" from eating where he picked. She'd spend a year deciding on a carpeting color, then claim that wasn't what she wanted and doesn't like it. I have a thousand examples like that. I don't want anyone to think I'm like her.
Sometimes I regret my decisions - I bought a desk good for laptops that had zero storage. That was a mistake, and I made sure the next time I bought a desk to get one with a lot of storage.
Anonymous wrote:How do you make quick decisions? Have you always been this way? Are you often wrong or regret decisions? Help the rest of us out please!
Anonymous wrote:I became this way by watching my mother who couldn't decide anything beyond what to make for dinner. If it was "where do you want to go for dinner?" she'd spend an hour and a half thinking as her two young children got progressively hungrier and more poorly behaved before my father snapped and made an executive decision, then she'd claim to get "sick" from eating where he picked. She'd spend a year deciding on a carpeting color, then claim that wasn't what she wanted and doesn't like it. I have a thousand examples like that. I don't want anyone to think I'm like her.
Sometimes I regret my decisions - I bought a desk good for laptops that had zero storage. That was a mistake, and I made sure the next time I bought a desk to get one with a lot of storage.