There are battles that you’re not supposed to fight while working at full capacity. Decision making is one of them.

You can bypass the frontal lobe decision making process and jump in right away. That still counts as free will and choice, but it is not the neurological decision making process. To successfully induce that loss of inhibition you gotta offer your normal inhibitory centers a distraction. A piece of meat or a bone. They will be controlling you while monitoring what’s going on in that scenario. They didn’t consent from the start, they didn’t give you the green light to go, they didn’t relief you from any sense of guilt by giving you the initial activation energy that fools you into believing oh this is so right, but they sure as hell stayed occupied while shutting up, because they got this and they are also hungry for the reward. They want the change, and they keep laughing at you for being so slow to act. You’re holding yourself back, even your decision making process centers, and they will be happy with the results that will come from this new loss of inhibition policy.

“I engage, and then I see what to do.” – Napoleon Bonaparte

The only instance you’re allowed to exercise your decision making powers to their full potential is while you’re writing a to-do list or scheduling stuff in your calendar.

Leave a Reply