Once In A Blue Moon

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December 6, 2025

Article of the Day

What is Framing Bias?

Definition Framing bias is when the same facts lead to different decisions depending on how they are presented. Gains versus…
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There’s a common myth that when you’re overwhelmed, uncertain, or exhausted, the only option is to stop everything. Hit pause. Shut it all down. And while full stops are sometimes necessary, they’re not always the answer.

Often, you don’t need to quit. You just need to slow down. Move deliberately.

When your pace is frantic, mistakes multiply. When your energy is scattered, results slip. But deliberate movement—intentional, steady, and focused—can keep you going without burning you out.

It’s about quality over speed. Progress over perfection. You don’t have to power through at full force. You just need to stay in motion, thoughtfully.

Think of it like driving in a storm. You don’t floor the gas, but you don’t pull over and turn off the engine either. You keep going, eyes on the road, hands steady, one mile at a time.

Deliberate action creates space. Space to think clearly. Space to make better decisions. Space to shift direction if needed. It gives you a sense of control when everything else feels chaotic.

This approach applies everywhere—work, relationships, health, personal goals. You can keep moving, even in uncertainty, as long as you do it with purpose.

So when you feel like shutting it all down, ask yourself:
Do I need to stop completely, or do I just need to move more intentionally?

You might find that deliberate momentum is exactly what carries you through.


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