Resources

Commit to Follow Through

Share this post

Are you committed?

Ask yourself:

  • Am I ready to send in my letter accepting the school's offer?
  • Do I have the necessary means to successfully attend my chosen school and/or the solid plans to get them?

Ask your head:

  • What would stop me from saying yes to my chosen school?
  • Am I prepared for the consequences of saying yes?

Ask your heart:

  • What fears do I have that might prevent me from making my decision real and how do I address them?

Challenges to Commitment

Let’s breakdown some common challenges to committing to your goal, whatever that goal may be. The two main challenges are inertia and fear.

Inertia

Inertia is a property of matter (Bill Nye reference, anyone?). In common terms, inertia is continuing to do what you always do. It’s the fancier word for “going with the flow.” You can get caught in a cycle of your regular activities, as if you are living on autopilot, and it often takes the emergence of a decision or opportunity to get you out of it. 

It’s within your decision power to break the inertia of non-action. It’s also in your power to create positive and constructive momentum for yourself! Click here to read about the breakdown of the Decision Chain and how to maximize the quality of your decisions. 

Fear

What’s your biggest fear? Sharks? Snakes?... Failure? 

If fear of failure sounds more like you, there’s an easy solution. What if I told you that I could guarantee that you’ll never fail! All you have to do is absolutely nothing. 

That’s the catch. Do nothing. If you never make any decisions, never apply for that internship, never go on that trip, and never take that risk, then you will never fail. 

But that’s not how life works. Letting fear of failure, fear of rejection, or fear of other people’s opinions inhibit your action will not help you achieve your goals. This is where DEF steps in.

Strengthening your decision with the Decision Chain can help you have confidence in the quality of your decision, and allow you to separate your decision from its outcome. There will always be uncertainties and things we cannot control, but if we can make good decisions and be confident in their quality, we can accept that sometimes we may have a bad outcome.

Featured Decision Guides

Find instructions and educational information to help guide your college choice.

Make Progress towards Your Decision

The Conversations for Clarity worksheet provides a structured method for making progress toward a decision. It helps you find your weakest Decision Chain link.

Learn the Decision Chain

The purpose of making good quality decisions is to get more of what you truly want out of life. A good decision makes sense and feels right.

Commit to Follow Through

Commitment to follow through means that you are set to execute on your decision. It's like pulling an internal switch, and you'll do whatever it takes to make your decision real. You're ready when you're prepared with all the necessary resources like time, effort, money, and help from others. You should also ready to overcome obstacles and have a plan B prepared.

Sign up for our online class

It's a 5-6 hour, self-paced course and recommended for any age 13 and above.