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Choices feel heavy because each one threatens loss. To choose is to exclude. To Decide is to risk being wrong. So indecision becomes shelter. A place where nothing is fully claimed, but nothing is fully lost inside. At the root of chronic indecision lies a nervous system trained for caution. When environments are unpredictable, certainty feels dangerous. The mind learns to scan endlessly, searching for the safest option rather than the truest one. Psychologically, this pattern reflects a conflict between desire and fear. Wanting activates vulnerability. Choosing activates responsibility. Both awaken memories of regret, judgment, or consequence. Neuroscience adds another layer. Decision making requires integration between emotional and rational centers. When anxiety dominates, the brain delays commitment. Dopamine drops. Cortisol rises. The body interprets choice as threat. Indecision, then, is not a lack of motivation. It is an overload of significance. Every option carries imagined futures, imagined failures, imagined selves that might be lost. Internally, resistance forms. A voice urging movement meets another urging restraint. One says choose. The other says wait. The stalemate preserves safety, but erodes clarity. Over time, the self becomes fragmented. Preferences blur. Desire quiets. Not because it disappears, but because expressing it feels unsafe. The person no longer trusts wanting itself, and hesitates in silence, suspended between options and outcomes endlessly, without resolution or relief inside.