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Description
You weren't asking because you didn't know. You were asking because you hadn't yet learned to trust that knowing was enough. It begins so reasonably. You ask a friend for their opinion. You poll the group chat. You read every review before committing to anything, consult everyone around you before acting on what you already, quietly, know. From the outside it looks like thoroughness. From the inside, it feels like an inability to trust the one voice that matters most - your own.Stop Outsourcing Every Decision You Make explores the deeply human habit of handing your choices to others and what lies beneath it. It examines how chronic external consultation is rarely about lacking information - it is about lacking permission to trust yourself. It gently reframes the constant seeking of outside validation not as indecisiveness or weakness, but as an understandable response to a history in which your own judgment was doubted, overridden, or quietly taught to feel unreliable.This book offers insight into the inner mechanics of decision avoidance: the anxiety that arrives the moment a choice belongs entirely to you, the relief of consensus that dissolves the moment you act on it, and what it genuinely means to reclaim authorship over your own life without requiring everyone around you to co-sign it first. It does not promise effortless confidence or a life free of uncertainty. What it offers is something more honest and more grounding - a compassionate understanding of why you learned to stop trusting yourself, and what it looks like to quietly, carefully begin again.For anyone who has asked everyone else what they should do - and realized, somewhere in the asking, that they already knew the answer.



