Summary
Why Stress Distorts Decision-Making
Leaders often assume that poor decisions come from poor thinking. In reality, decisions are more often distorted by stress.
In this lesson, you’ll explore how pressure reorganises the nervous system — narrowing perception, accelerating urgency, and reducing access to perspective. When this happens, decisions tend to become rushed, over-controlled, or avoidant, even in capable and experienced leaders.
This video reframes decision-making away from willpower and intelligence, and toward state. When coherence is present, clarity returns naturally. When it isn’t, even the best frameworks struggle to help.
Understanding this distinction allows leaders to stop blaming themselves — and start restoring the conditions that support good decisions.
In this lesson, you will:
- Understand how stress alters perception and judgement
- Learn why clarity disappears under pressure — even when you “know better”
- Recognise urgency as a physiological signal, not a directive
- Begin shifting from forcing decisions to restoring conditions for clarity
Reflection & Practice
This lesson is supported by a short reflection to help you recognise when stress — not lack of skill — is shaping your decisions. Awareness here prevents overcorrection later.
How to use this lesson
Watch the video without pausing. Then complete the reflection honestly and briefly. You’re not evaluating decisions — you’re learning to notice the state decisions are made from.
