Fewer Choices, More Freedom?

We all get thrown for a curve. 

Life is going along all smooth and predictable and then BOOM something shifts. Suddenly, you're struggling and choking and trying to keep your head out of the water, even if the water is a puddle and you just need to lift your head an inch and you'd be clear and find it easier to breathe.

But sometimes an inch feels like a mile. I get that.

What We Show

My life looks all rosy from the outside, mostly because I let people believe it's all rosy.

Look at me! I can handle anything! Who's a bad mofo? Me! I got this! If I can make it, you can make it too!

Yet the truth would be that I think I barely have anything going on, let alone anything going on in this moment.

I'm a screw-up.

I struggle with weights, I struggle with running, I struggle with motherhood, I struggle with love, I struggle with life. (And I know that most of us feel that way at times, so I don't stress about it too much.)

If I had to pick two words to describe my state of mind, I'd go with "so confused."

And the more choices I have to make, the more confused I become.

The Simplicity of Not Choosing

Back when I was in the Air Force, life was a little easier. Sure, it was before marriage (and divorce), before kids, before so many passings of loved ones, before the years and the tears grew into a big messy pile, before 9/11, before coming out, before the silver started to appear at my temples like the snow of wisdom falling overnight.

But why was life easier back then? Probably many more reasons than I could list, but I think of two words: fewer choices. I had so many fewer choices back then.

The USAF told me the base where I would be stationed, the uniform I would wear, the hours I would work, and what "trips" I was going on and to where. That lack of choice was somehow tremendously freeing. That sounds crazy, right?

But it was freeing. With each decision they made, I had one fewer decision to make, and that freed my mind to concentrate on the big decisions, instead of the small decisions. If you think about it, that makes sense, doesn't it?

The Weird Relationship of Freedom and Choice

Fewer small choices leave the brainpower for concentration on the bigger choices.

  • Maybe that's why Mark Zuckerberg wears almost the same thing every day.

  • Maybe that's why some folks like organized religion.

  • Maybe that's why some people eat the same breakfast every day. Or the same lunch. Or the same dinner.

There is comfort in routines, and that comfort partly lies in the absence of choice.

Ironically, we crave choice and variety, but we relax when we have less of both. We want the right to have 57 flavors, but we likely don't want all 57 flavors. (Some folks do.) Each of us probably has three or four choices we really like. (I'm a sucker for salted caramel ice cream.)

No Swiss Cheese For You

Once, I stood in the deli of the Camp Lester Commissary (that's military-speak for supermarket) on the tiny island of Okinawa, Japan, and I asked the clerk for half of a pound of Swiss cheese.

He said, "Oh, we don't have any Swiss cheese. It wasn't on the boat this time. Check back next month. Maybe it will be on the boat then. Would you like Munster instead?"

I took the Munster.

Then I bought a tube of toothpaste from the four options available to me. Not 17 options, not five stores within a mile radius willing to sell me everything from vegan to bacon-flavored toothpaste Just four choices in one BX (that's military-speak for Kinda Lika K-Mart). And life went on. 

Simplify With Fewer Choices

So, the next time you find yourself flummoxed, think about making fewer choices.

  • Wear the same damn outfit (wash it so you don't stink)

  • Eat the same damn (healthy) thing

  • Back squat for a week

  • Run for a week

Or just go to the gym and do exactly what is on the whiteboard. No more, no less. Limit yourself so you can free your mind.

Cut down on your choices and see if that helps.

You can ramp up the variety later if you want. Just see if it helps right now. See if this simple act of simplifying pays mental dividends.

If it does, figure out more ways to simplify your life. (But don't spend your life only doing deadlifts or running. Experiment, then adjust! You can apply this many ways in life, like me: "Getting Lighter.")

Fewer choices, more freedom. It's ironic, but sometimes it's true.

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