Notice: Function _load_textdomain_just_in_time was called incorrectly. Translation loading for the wordpress-seo domain was triggered too early. This is usually an indicator for some code in the plugin or theme running too early. Translations should be loaded at the init action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /var/www/vhosts/jointhelegion.com/httpdocs/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6114
Livin' in the Fast Lane - Legion Logistics

Livin’ in the Fast Lane

Most people who have just graduated college are looking for a job, a new car, or a new apartment away from school. But by the time I graduated from college in August 2017, I had already started my marketing and soccer career, bought a house, got engaged, and was preparing to become a father. Was that all a part of my five-year plan? Absolutely not. Would I change my life? Not for a second.

Family and friends have always known me as the type of person to make educated, spur of the moment decisions. I know what you’re thinking – do “educated” and “spur of the moment” decisions belong in the same sentence? Probably not, but it’s how I’ve lived my life since graduating college.

I want everyone to realize that it’s 100 percent okay to make quick decisions, as long as you are prepared for the best- and worst-case scenario. Every decision has a result or effect on the person who made the decision and most of the time, the people around them, whether it is a life-changing outcome or something as simple as buying a puppy or picking a certain place to vacation.

The main point to take out of all these events is that I’ve never second-guessed a decision, or regretted any of the decisions I have made. Yes, there are always things that you might have wanted to go a bit differently, but every decision molds you into the person you have become. Sometimes when you take too long to make a decision, you develop decision fatigue, which causes you to lose focus and decreases your mental energy.

When you’re trying to make a decision about something you don’t have much experience with, you won’t have 100% of the information you think you need.

Still struggling to make a decision? Commit to making a specific number of decisions per day. They can be as small as what to eat to dinner tonight or as big as what kind of car to buy.

I truly believe that everything happens for a reason, so there is no reason to slow down, over analyze, or change your decisions. Stress will build the more you second guess the decisions you have to make.

Take a deep breath, think about the possible outcomes, and make a decision based on what you think, not what someone else thinks. You won’t regret it…

Go Back