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Most people believe their biggest mistakes come from bad information. In reality, many costly decisions come from something much quieter — a nervous system that was too overloaded to read the situation correctly. Your brain is constantly scanning the environment. Tone shifts. Facial tension. Timing. Posture. Behavioral patterns. Thousands of signals are processed every second and compressed into one internal sense of whether something feels right… or slightly off. But when pressure increases — deadlines, constant responsiveness, financial stress — the brain changes how it processes information. Instead of prioritizing accuracy, it prioritizes speed. Subtle signals get compressed. Nuance disappears. And the quality of the internal signal guiding your decisions begins to degrade. That’s when intelligent people start making timing mistakes. Buying too early. Selling too late. Ignoring small warning signs in partnerships. Or hesitating on opportunities they were actually ready for. From the outside it looks like a strategy problem. Internally, it’s a regulation problem. The people who seem unusually good at timing decisions — investors, leaders, negotiators — aren’t necessarily seeing more information than you are. Their nervous systems are simply quieter. And when the internal signal becomes clear again, the brain can detect patterns earlier, evaluate risk more calmly, and make decisions that create better long-term outcomes. In this video you’ll learn: • Three signs your nervous system is distorting the signals you rely on for decisions • Why pressure quietly changes how the brain interprets situations • One simple adjustment that restores signal clarity under stress Better decisions rarely start with more information. They start with a system that can read the situation clearly. #Neuroscience #DecisionMaking #Psychology