Making Decisions Once You Know What Your Values Are
Dr. Amy Fichtner | March 12, 2021
Dr. Amy Fichtner | March 12, 2021
The character trait for this month is Decisiveness. The irony is that as I was studying the topic of decision-making and preparing these remarks I certainly felt indecisive as I tried to determine what to include or exclude. Decisiveness is defined by the Cambridge and Oxford Dictionaries as the ability to make decisions quickly, efficiently or confidently. We can all likely think of examples where decisiveness is a life and death matter – the battlefields of war or emergency work of first responders. We watch action movies that are saturated with decisiveness – actions that quickly change the course of the movie and the heroes are often decisive charismatic leaders. Consider for a moment, though, the people in your lives who are quite wise. We treasure their advice. You might hear those wise people say things, such as…
How does one marry the need for decisiveness with the need to be wise as a decision-maker?
Roy E. Disney shares insight on this topic. He says, “It’s not hard to make decisions once you know what your values are.” Let that resonate a moment. “It’s not hard to make decisions once you know what your values are.”
We can spend enormous amounts of time on evaluating options – which stock to purchase, what car to buy, which job to pursue, which person to marry, and more. While certainly these decisions are important, just think how much more decisive we would each be if we invest our energies on our values and then let the decisions follow. Here’s an example in my life. As a professional educator, each decision I make in some way affects the education and future of a child. The weight of that is humbling and causes me to take decisions quite seriously. If I take Roy Disney’s advice and invest in knowing what my values are, then my decisions will follow. Here are a few of my values:
So what questions follow:
You see the pattern. I recently read Andy Stanley’s, Better Decisions, Fewer Regrets.’ In it he shares, “Every decision you make becomes a permanent part of your story. The Story of your life.” I encourage each of us to spend quality time determining what our life values are. Then, we will live a life of decisiveness because each decision becomes a reflection of the values we have chosen to write our life’s story.