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The Decision Journal

Record decisions when you make them. Review when outcomes are known. Learn from your own judgment.

You made a decision. It worked out - or it didn't. But do you remember why you decided that way? What you knew? What you were uncertain about? Without a record, hindsight rewrites history. You can't learn from decisions you've misremembered.

The journal captures reasoning before outcomes corrupt memory.

Write it down when you decide. Review it when you know.

The Entry

What To Record

The Decision

What are you deciding? State it clearly. "Hired X over Y for the engineering role." Specific enough to evaluate later.

The Date

When did you make this decision? Timestamp matters. Your information state changes over time.

The Context

What did you know when you decided? What information did you have? What didn't you know? Capture the fog of the moment.

The Reasoning

Why this choice? What factors mattered most? What alternatives did you consider and reject? Your logic, not just your conclusion.

The Confidence

How sure are you? 60%? 90%? Quantify it. Vague confidence can't be calibrated.

The Expected Outcome

What do you expect will happen? What would "success" look like? What would "failure" look like? Define the test.

Template
Date: [When decided]
Decision: [What I'm choosing]
Context: [What I know / don't know]
Alternatives Considered: [What I rejected and why]
Key Factors: [What mattered most]
Confidence: [X% this is the right call]
Expected Outcome: [What I think will happen]
Review Date: [When I'll know the outcome]
The Review

Learning From Outcomes

Schedule The Review

When you write the entry, set a date to revisit. Put it in your calendar. Without scheduled review, journals become graveyards.

Compare Without Judgment

Read your original entry before evaluating the outcome. Notice where you were right. Notice where you were wrong. The goal is learning, not self-criticism.

Separate Process From Outcome

Good decisions can have bad outcomes (bad luck). Bad decisions can have good outcomes (good luck). Evaluate your reasoning, not just the result.

Update Your Calibration

Were your 80% predictions right 80% of the time? Track your accuracy by confidence level. Over time, patterns emerge.

Why It Works

The Psychology

Defeats Hindsight Bias

"I knew it all along" is a lie your brain tells. The written record proves what you actually knew. Hindsight bias makes learning impossible; the journal defeats it.

Forces Clarity

Writing crystallizes vague thinking. If you can't articulate your reasoning, you don't have reasoning. The act of journaling improves the decision itself.

Creates Accountability

Future you will read this. That awareness sharpens thinking. You're committing to a position on the record.

Reveals Patterns

Individual decisions seem random. Collections reveal tendencies. "I'm consistently overconfident in hiring" only emerges from data. The journal is the data.

Practical

Making It Stick

Lower The Bar

You don't need to journal every decision. Start with consequential ones. Hires. Investments. Strategy pivots. The ones worth learning from.

Keep It Short

Five minutes per entry is enough. A terse record beats no record. Perfection kills consistency.

Make It Searchable

Tag by domain, by type, by outcome. Future you needs to find patterns. A pile of notes isn't a journal - a queryable archive is.

Build The Ritual

Decide, then journal. Always. The gap between decision and documentation is where entries die. Make it part of the decision process, not an afterthought.

Most people trust their memory. Most memories are wrong. The decision journal is how you stop fooling yourself.

Write when you decide. Review when you know. Learn what you're actually good at - and what you're not. Calibration is wisdom. The journal is how you get there.

You can't learn from decisions you've misremembered.