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In this episode of Behavior Gap Radio, Carl introduces problem-to-solve planning, a practical mode of planning meant for moments of urgency, constraint, or pain. Drawing from stories in the mountains, the ER, and years of reader questions, he explains why some situations don’t call for deep purpose or big-picture reflection. They call for action. Problem-to-solve planning asks one clear question: What are we actually solving for right now? When used well, it stabilizes the situation, reduces anxiety, and restores enough clarity and bandwidth to move forward. Sometimes the wisest plan is simply getting the arrow out of your arm.
Want more from Carl? Get the shortest, most impactful weekly email on the web! Sign up for the Weekly Letter from Certified Financial Planner™ and New York Times columnist Carl Richards here: https://behaviorgap.com/
By Carl Richards4.9
124124 ratings
In this episode of Behavior Gap Radio, Carl introduces problem-to-solve planning, a practical mode of planning meant for moments of urgency, constraint, or pain. Drawing from stories in the mountains, the ER, and years of reader questions, he explains why some situations don’t call for deep purpose or big-picture reflection. They call for action. Problem-to-solve planning asks one clear question: What are we actually solving for right now? When used well, it stabilizes the situation, reduces anxiety, and restores enough clarity and bandwidth to move forward. Sometimes the wisest plan is simply getting the arrow out of your arm.
Want more from Carl? Get the shortest, most impactful weekly email on the web! Sign up for the Weekly Letter from Certified Financial Planner™ and New York Times columnist Carl Richards here: https://behaviorgap.com/

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