Instead of imagining perfect alternatives, note actual regrets over the week. If they are rare and minor, your satisficing threshold is calibrated. If they cluster, raise standards or optimize the specific bottleneck producing most of the disappointment.
Try two breakfast routines for three days each, or two inbox filters for a week. Measure energy, time saved, and reliability. Small, reversible experiments reveal whether an apparent improvement is real, while keeping risk low and enthusiasm high.
Keep a quick log with three numbers: decision time, satisfaction after a day, and rework needed. Weekly averages reveal patterns early. Celebrate fast, good choices, and investigate slow, messy ones with curiosity rather than blame, then tweak thresholds thoughtfully.
Maya spent weeks comparing premium olive oils online, chasing minuscule taste differences. She later set a threshold, chose a midrange bottle with a reliable seal, and redirected the saved hours toward calling her grandmother. Dinner still dazzled; memories mattered more.
After months tolerating a slow route, Omar tested two alternatives for a week each, tracked arrival calmness, and negotiated flexible hours. Optimizing paid off because benefits compounded daily. He still satisficed on coffee stops, keeping mornings simple, smooth, and predictable.
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