Decision Fatigue & Depletion-Driven Defaults

A regulation pattern where repeated choices gradually drain the capacity for careful judgment. As energy drops, decisions are more likely to be driven by relief, familiarity, or the loudest available option than by fit.

This pattern often shows up when a long run of meetings, approvals, requests, and ambiguous calls quietly drains the ability to choose well. Early in the day, you can weigh tradeoffs, hold context, and push back when needed. Later, the same decisions start getting made for a different reason: they are the fastest way to end friction, uncertainty, or mental effort. A meeting gets accepted because saying no would take explaining. A familiar vendor gets renewed because comparing options feels like too much. The first strong opinion in the room becomes the plan because reopening the discussion would cost energy you no longer have. From the outside this can look efficient. Inside, it feels more like depleted judgment than clear intention. The concern is not only that choices get thinner by the end of the day, but that the defaults arriving in low-capacity moments may slowly shape work, time, and self-trust.

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Abstract black and white image depicting converging lines that symbolize decision fatigue and reduced options

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Decision fatigue refers to the gradual drop in effortful decision-making after repeated choices. Depletion-driven defaults are the shortcuts that take over when capacity gets low: saying yes to avoid explaining, keeping the familiar option because comparison feels expensive, or letting someone else’s momentum decide the direction. In founder life, those two constructs often travel together. A single big decision rarely causes the whole pattern. More often, capacity is worn down by a chronic stream of small interpersonal, operational, and strategic calls. As the load builds, the system shifts from deliberate judgment toward relief, speed, and closure. When beliefs about inadequacy, failure, or control are also active, each choice carries more emotional weight, which makes depletion arrive faster and defaults feel more compelling.

It is usually the pileup, not one decision

This concern usually builds through accumulated choice load. A founder may handle one complex decision well, but dozens of smaller approvals, requests, and ambiguous calls can quietly drain the ability to weigh the next decision with the same care.

Low-capacity choices can look like pragmatism

Later decisions can still look fast and functional from the outside. The issue is that the choice is being made to reduce effort, friction, or uncertainty, not because it was genuinely the best fit after full evaluation.

Founder roles create hidden decision volume

Founder work concentrates work, time, and identity into the same stream of decisions. Strategic choices, people choices, and operational choices often stack together, so depletion arrives through constant switching rather than one dramatic event.

Defaults are often relief strategies

The default is rarely random. It usually favors whatever is easiest, most familiar, already in motion, or least likely to create more conversation. That makes the short-term move feel efficient while increasing the risk of later regret, drift, or missed fit.

Belief pressure changes what each choice means

When beliefs around inadequacy, failure, or powerlessness are active, decisions carry extra emotional meaning. The choice is no longer only about logistics; it can feel like proof of competence, a verdict on success, control over outcomes, or a statement about who you are as a leader.

Inner statements

I know I should think this through, but I just need it off my plate.

Founders carrying nonstop approvals, inbox decisions, and calendar tradeoffs

If I reopen this conversation, I will lose the little energy I have left.

Leaders who spend the day managing people friction, requests, and pushback

If I make the wrong call, it says something bad about me.

Operators whose role ties decisions closely to performance, outcomes, and self-worth

Just pick something familiar. I cannot hold another round of variables right now.

Entrepreneurs in ambiguous environments where each option feels tied to time, identity, or control

Common questions

What is decision fatigue, and how is it different from ordinary stress or procrastination?

Stress is broader and can affect many parts of life. Procrastination is about delaying action. Decision fatigue is more specific: after repeated choices and acts of self-control, effortful judgment gets harder to sustain. You may still make decisions, but later choices become narrower, more reactive, and more likely to lean on the easiest available option.

Why do my choices get narrower or more reactive later in the day?

Repeated choices use regulatory energy. As the day goes on, especially after many small interpersonal and operational calls, the system has less room for holding tradeoffs, tolerating ambiguity, and pushing back. That is when the loudest, most familiar, or least effortful option can start to feel disproportionately right.

Am I making bad decisions, or am I making depleted decisions?

A poor outcome still matters, but it helps to ask whether the same choice would have been made in a higher-capacity window. If your judgment is noticeably steadier earlier in the day and thinner when depleted, the issue may be load and timing as much as decision skill. That distinction points toward both structural changes and deeper therapeutic work.

Why do I keep defaulting to the easiest option even when the stakes are high?

When capacity drops, the system becomes more motivated to reduce effort and tension quickly. Relief, closure, and familiarity become more rewarding than careful comparison. In founder settings, where decisions often require explanation, pushback, or uncertainty tolerance, the easiest option can win simply because it costs less energy in the moment.

Can underlying beliefs about failure or control make decision fatigue worse?

Yes, they can increase the pressure carried by each choice. If a decision feels tied to worth, success, or agency, it stops being just a practical call and starts feeling like a test. That extra meaning can make decision load more draining and can shape which low-capacity shortcuts feel most relieving when fatigue sets in.

In ordinary life, this concern often shows up less as dramatic collapse and more as quiet drift. The day begins with active judgment, but after enough meetings, requests, tradeoffs, and follow-up decisions, the threshold for one more thoughtful call drops. You may still look functional and productive. The issue is that decisions start being made for different reasons: to avoid friction, to end uncertainty, to stay moving, or to conserve the little energy that is left. Because founder work blends strategy, relationships, time pressure, and identity, the shift can affect not just one choice but the whole tone of how the day ends and how you feel about yourself afterward.

In your choices

  • Saying yes to a meeting or request because saying no would require explanation
  • Renewing a familiar vendor, tool, or process because comparing options feels like too much work
  • Letting the first strong proposal stand because reopening the discussion feels expensive
  • Postponing re-evaluation and sticking with the current path by default

In your thinking

  • Weighing fewer factors late in the day than you would in the morning
  • Wanting closure more than fit
  • Reaching for what is easiest, loudest, or most familiar instead of what best matches the situation
  • Feeling unable to hold multiple tradeoffs in mind once the day is already full

In leadership and relationships

  • Accepting meetings, requests, or small people decisions to avoid friction
  • Letting others' momentum determine direction when pushback would take more energy
  • Pulling back from difficult conversations because another call feels like too much
  • Handing a decision over too quickly, then feeling resentful or less in control afterward

In your time and workflow

  • Saving important but nonurgent calls for later until they become rushed
  • Reducing initiative once many decisions have already been made
  • Letting reactive approvals crowd out higher-value thinking time
  • Keeping an existing plan in motion because reworking it feels too costly today

In your body and pace

  • A clear late-day drop in mental stamina after many decisions
  • Tension or urgency rising when plans change or answers stay unclear
  • Feeling mentally foggy, flat, or tightly self-monitored by the end of a high-decision stretch
  • Wanting numbing or disengagement once capacity is spent

In self-trust afterward

  • Looking back at a tired decision and reading it as proof that you are not good enough
  • Interpreting a suboptimal call as evidence that you are failing
  • Feeling powerless or trapped when more decisions are still waiting
  • Replaying the day and doubting your judgment instead of reading the pattern as load

When it tends to show up

It commonly builds after a long day of small interpersonal decisions, repeated approvals, ambiguous strategic calls, or end-of-week accumulation. It tends to show up when the next decision requires explanation, pushback, comparison, or tolerating uncertainty. The pattern is often strongest in late-day or chronic high-load periods, especially when real off-time is thin and each choice feels tied to performance, outcome, or control.

This pattern is not just about being busy. Decision fatigue is the cumulative drop in effortful regulation that follows repeated choices. Depletion-driven defaults are the avoidance, control, or numbing shortcuts that take over when the system wants relief fast. In founder work, the load often comes from a chronic stream of small interpersonal, operational, and strategic calls rather than one dramatic event. Structural truth adds that some decisions carry extra weight because they are filtered through beliefs about inadequacy, failure, or powerlessness. When that happens, each choice is not only practical; it also feels tied to worth, outcome, or agency. Capacity drops faster, pressure rises, and the mind narrows toward whatever closes the loop with the least effort, even if the fit is weaker.

A common loop

  1. Trigger

    A long run of meetings, approvals, requests, and ambiguous calls builds cumulative load across the day or week.

  2. Meaning Load

    Because choices feel tied to competence, success, or control, ordinary decisions start carrying more emotional weight than the situation alone would require.

  3. Pressure for Relief

    Uncertainty, comparison, and the effort of holding tradeoffs become harder to tolerate, so the system wants closure, certainty, or less friction.

  4. Default Strategy

    You auto-yes, stick with the familiar option, let the first strong opinion stand, postpone re-evaluation, over-control what you can, or disengage from further effortful judgment.

  5. Reinforcement

    The decision ending brings short-term relief, but later regret, business friction, or self-criticism can be taken as proof of inadequacy, failure, or lost control, priming the next cycle.

Part of this pattern is a regulation shift, not just a thinking problem. After sustained demands, the system has less energy for effortful self-control, which helps explain why late decisions can feel narrow, urgent, or strangely automatic. If you already run high self-monitoring around performance or outcomes, decision volume can feel especially taxing because each call is being watched internally, not just made. Powerlessness themes can add another layer: uncertainty starts to feel threatening, plan changes can spike urgency, and the system may swing between gripping for control and giving decisions away. By the end of a long stretch, you may look functional from the outside while internally moving on depleted capacity, shallow patience, and a stronger pull toward relief, numbness, or shutdown.

The mapped beliefs in this section help explain why decision load can feel heavier than the calendar alone would suggest. When ordinary choices are filtered through themes of not being good enough, being a failure, or losing control, each call can start to feel like a test of worth, outcome, or agency. That extra meaning increases pressure long before capacity is visibly gone. Decision fatigue then makes relief-based choices more likely, and those choices can later be interpreted through the same beliefs that raised the pressure in the first place. The belief content below is rendered from the mapped specialty relationship. This concern page provides the framing for how those beliefs can amplify Decision Fatigue & Depletion-Driven Defaults without turning the concern into a custom belief list.


Limiting Beliefs Commonly Linked with Entrepreneurs/Founders Therapy

These identity-level patterns frequently show up for clients seeking entrepreneurs/founders therapy. Explore the beliefs to learn the “why” and how therapy can help you recondition them.

Visual representation of the belief ‘I’m Not Good Enough’ from the ShiftGrit Pattern Library, used in Identity-Level Therapy to help individuals recondition emotional patterns.

“I Am Not Good Enough”

“I’m Not Good Enough” isn’t just a negative thought — it’s a pattern formed by early experiences like criticism, neglect, or impossible expectations. This belief fuels perfectionism, people-pleasing,…

Explore this belief
Periodic table-style icon for the limiting belief “I Am A Failure”

“I Am A Failure”

“I Am A Failure” isn’t about isolated mistakes — it’s a deeply patterned belief that tells you nothing you do is good enough. It drives procrastination, perfectionism, and…

Explore this belief
Visual belief card labelled “I Am Powerless” — part of ShiftGrit’s limiting belief schema.

“I Am Powerless”

The belief “I Am Powerless” often forms in environments where autonomy was suppressed and safety depended on submission. It creates chronic helplessness, low agency, and difficulty asserting needs…

Explore this belief

Want to see how these fit into the bigger pattern map? Explore our full Limiting Belief Library to browse all core beliefs by schema domain and Lifetrap.


This section frames the kinds of earlier learning experiences that can make decision-making feel unusually loaded in adult work life. The point is not that every tired decision comes from the past, or that current workload is irrelevant. It is that some people learned early that choices carry emotional consequences around approval, failure, safety, or control. When that history is present, founder-level decision volume can land on a system that is already primed to over-monitor, over-correct, or brace against getting it wrong. The origin material below is mapped from the specialty relationship rather than invented for this concern page. Use it as context for why depletion may attach so quickly to identity, agency, and self-trust.

This pattern often repeats because the short-term reward is immediate: the decision is over, the tension drops, and mental effort briefly decreases. Saying yes, keeping the familiar option, deferring to someone else’s momentum, or disengaging from more analysis can all bring fast relief in a depleted moment. The problem is that the later costs do not stay neutral. Regret, friction, missed fit, or harsh self-review can become fresh pressure for the next round, making future choices feel even more loaded. Over time, the system starts chasing relief instead of fit and trusting defaults instead of capacity. The loop material below is rendered from the mapped specialty relationship, while this intro explains how the pattern sustains itself at the concern level.

“I Am Not Good Enough”

Evidence Pile

When this belief is active, the mind tends to scan for signs of inadequacy, mistakes, or perceived shortcomings, using them as evidence of personal deficiency.

Show common “proof” items
  • Noticing mistakes, imperfections, or areas of struggle more than successes
  • Interpreting criticism, feedback, or silence as confirmation of inadequacy
  • Comparing abilities, confidence, or outcomes to others and coming up short
  • Feeling behind others in competence, confidence, or emotional resilience
  • Remembering past failures or embarrassing moments vividly

Pressure Cooker

The nervous system stays oriented toward evaluation and self-monitoring, treating performance, approval, or outcomes as constant tests of worth.

Show common signals
  • Persistent self-evaluation or internal comparison to standards or others
  • Heightened sensitivity to feedback, mistakes, or perceived criticism
  • Difficulty feeling settled after success or reassurance
  • Interpreting effort or struggle as evidence of inadequacy
  • Feeling exposed, fragile, or “found out” despite competence

Opt-Out patterns

Relief comes from striving, improving, or proving worth—temporarily easing discomfort while reinforcing the sense that adequacy must be earned.

Show Opt-Out patterns
  • Overpreparing, overworking, or perfectionistic effort
  • Seeking reassurance, validation, or external approval
  • Avoiding situations where performance might be judged
  • Self-criticism used as motivation ("pushing myself harder")
  • Difficulty receiving praise without discounting it
Reinforces the belief → the cycle starts again

“I Am A Failure”

Evidence Pile

When this belief is active, the mind reviews outcomes that fell short of expectations and interprets them as proof of personal failure rather than information, timing, or learning.

Show common “proof” items
  • Goals that were not achieved or plans that did not work out as intended
  • Setbacks, mistakes, or perceived underperformance in work, school, or relationships
  • Comparing your progress to others who appear more successful or ahead
  • Feedback, criticism, or consequences that feel like confirmation of inadequacy
  • Repeated attempts that required adjustment, redirection, or starting over

Pressure Cooker

The nervous system tracks outcomes and results, interpreting setbacks, slow progress, or unmet expectations as confirmation that efforts ultimately lead to failure.

Show common signals
  • Intense reaction to mistakes, setbacks, or unmet goals
  • Interpreting temporary difficulties as evidence of permanent failure
  • All-or-nothing thinking around success (“If I didn’t succeed, I failed”)
  • Difficulty acknowledging progress unless it ends in a clear win
  • Shame or collapse after effort, even when effort was reasonable

Opt-Out patterns

Relief comes from reducing exposure to possible failure—either by avoiding risk altogether or disengaging before an outcome can define them.

Show Opt-Out patterns
  • Procrastination or avoidance of tasks tied to identity or evaluation
  • Quitting early or not fully committing to preserve self-image
  • Downplaying goals or effort (“I didn’t really care anyway”)
  • Self-sabotage that provides an explanation for failure
  • Cycling between over-effort and total withdrawal
Reinforces the belief → the cycle starts again

“I Am Powerless”

Evidence Pile

When this belief is active, the mind notices moments where effort did not lead to change and interprets them as proof that personal agency is limited or ineffective.

Show common “proof” items
  • Repeated attempts to change a situation that did not produce the desired outcome
  • Being affected by decisions, rules, or circumstances you did not choose
  • Feeling stuck despite thinking, planning, or trying harder
  • Past experiences where speaking up or acting did not alter what happened
  • Watching others control outcomes while your own influence feels minimal

Pressure Cooker

When “I Am Powerless” is active, the nervous system stays braced for threat. Uncertainty feels dangerous, and even small losses of control can trigger urgency, shutdown, or panic.

Show common signals
  • Chronic vigilance around decisions, timing, or outcomes
  • Heightened anxiety when plans change or answers are unclear
  • A sense of being trapped, stuck, or at the mercy of others
  • Rapid escalation from “concern” to overwhelm

Opt-Out patterns

When pressure peaks, the system looks for relief by either seizing control or giving it up entirely.

Show Opt-Out patterns
  • Over-planning, micromanaging, or rigid routines
  • Avoiding decisions to escape responsibility or risk
  • Freezing, procrastinating, or “waiting for permission”
  • Handing control to others, then feeling resentful or invisible
  • Emotional numbing or dissociation when action feels unsafe
Reinforces the belief → the cycle starts again

Therapy for this concern usually works on two levels at once: the practical architecture of decisions and the deeper meaning the system assigns to them. The goal is not to eliminate all fatigue or create perfect choices. It is to reduce how often important decisions are made from depletion, while loosening the shame, failure, or control pressure that keeps the cycle going.

What therapy often focuses on

Map where capacity drops

Therapy can help identify which choices drain you fastest: small people decisions, ambiguous strategic calls, repeated approvals, or end-of-day comparison tasks. The goal is to see where judgment predictably degrades instead of treating every hard day as random.

Build intentional decision structure

Support may include creating criteria, routines, delegation rules, and intentional defaults for recurring choices such as meetings, renewals, approvals, and requests. This reduces unnecessary decision volume so fatigue is not deciding for you.

Separate depleted moments from identity

A late-day shortcut can easily become evidence of inadequacy, failure, or powerlessness. Therapy helps disentangle a low-capacity moment from global conclusions about who you are, so repair becomes more possible than self-attack.

Work with performance and control pressure

When choices feel like tests of worth or control, they cost more than the calendar suggests. Therapy can address the inner pressure to get every call right, the urgency to close uncertainty, and the tendency to over-monitor outcomes.

Strengthen pacing and recovery

Improvement often depends on more than pushing harder. Therapy can help build pause points, timing rules, and recovery practices so important decisions are less likely to be made in states of depletion, numbness, or shutdown.

What to expect

  1. Notice the pattern in real time

    Early work often involves tracking recent decisions, time-of-day shifts, and the moments when deliberate thinking gives way to autopilot, avoidance, or over-control. This creates a clearer map of the cycle.

  2. Restructure the decision environment

    You may start testing practical changes such as delaying nonurgent late-day decisions, protecting higher-capacity windows, and pre-deciding criteria for recurring choices. The aim is to lower avoidable load without pretending the role has no demands.

  3. Understand the deeper pressure

    As the pattern becomes clearer, therapy may look at what decisions come to mean internally: proof of adequacy, fear of failure, or pressure to stay in control. This helps explain why some choices feel heavier than they appear.

  4. Practice steadier timing and recovery

    Over time, the work often focuses on pausing sooner, tolerating uncertainty longer, and recovering more deliberately after demanding stretches. Progress is usually measured by fewer depleted defaults, not by never feeling tired again.

Change in this concern usually looks more like steadier judgment than endless efficiency. You may still have demanding days, but fewer important choices are made from depletion alone. There is more ability to notice when relief, familiarity, or urgency is driving the decision and to pause, delay, or use criteria instead. Improvement also tends to show up in how you interpret imperfect calls: less identity collapse, less all-or-nothing self-attack, and more accurate reading of capacity, context, and tradeoffs. The aim is not never feeling tired. It is protecting agency, time, and self-trust so decision quality does not depend entirely on whatever energy is left.

Common markers of change

Strategic timing

Before: High-stakes calls get made late mainly to get them off the list.

After: High-stakes calls are moved into higher-capacity windows or guided by clear criteria.

Meetings and boundaries

Before: Requests get automatic yeses because no takes energy you do not have.

After: You pause, decline, or renegotiate based on fit rather than late-day depletion.

Handling uncertainty

Before: The familiar option or first opinion wins because ambiguity feels too expensive.

After: You can tolerate not knowing long enough to compare options and choose with more intention.

Self-evaluation

Before: A tired decision becomes proof that you are inadequate, failing, or not in control.

After: A depleted decision is read as information about load, followed by repair instead of identity attack.

Recovery and pacing

Before: You run until judgment collapses, then numb out or disengage.

After: You notice capacity dropping earlier and protect time, off-time, and pacing before the slide becomes automatic.

Skills therapy may support

Energy-aware planning

Scheduling complex or values-heavy decisions earlier in the day or after real recovery, instead of after a run of low-value approvals.

Decision triage and prioritization

Sorting decisions into must decide now, can wait, or can be delegated so every issue does not hit with equal urgency.

Boundary-setting around meetings and requests

Using preset criteria for when to accept, delay, decline, or ask for more information.

Tolerance for uncertainty without rushing

Holding a decision open long enough to compare options, even when quick closure would feel relieving.

Reflective pause before committing

Taking a brief check of fit, timing, and current capacity before saying yes or renewing by habit.

Delegation and criteria-based decision design

Turning repeated approvals into clear rules or delegated choices so judgment is reserved for the decisions that truly need it.

Separating outcome from identity judgments

Reviewing an imperfect call as data about context and capacity rather than proof that you are not good enough, a failure, or powerless.

Next steps

  1. Track your decision load for one to two weeks

    Notice the type of decision, time of day, and whether the final choice felt deliberate or merely easiest. This can reveal whether the sharpest drop happens after interpersonal calls, strategic ambiguity, repeated approvals, or simple accumulation.

  2. Protect higher-capacity windows

    Move strategic or values-heavy decisions into times when your judgment is stronger, and create a rule to delay nonurgent late-day calls. This is not avoidance; it is protecting decision quality when the stakes warrant more than a depleted default.

  3. Pre-decide criteria for recurring choices

    Use clear criteria for meetings, renewals, approvals, and requests so each one does not demand fresh energy. Intentional defaults can reduce decision volume without handing your direction over to fatigue.

  4. Get support if the pattern turns into shame or control struggle

    If depleted decisions repeatedly trigger self-attack, hopelessness, or a strong need to grip harder or give up entirely, support can help address both the practical decision system and the underlying belief pressure shaping it.

Ways to get support

Work with a Therapist on Founder Decision Fatigue

Match with a ShiftGrit therapist who can help you address the regulation patterns underneath the depleted defaults, not just the schedule.

Get Matched

Explore Therapy for Entrepreneurs & Founders

Operator-stage psychology is its own niche. Learn how ShiftGrit supports founders working under high decision volume and identity-fused stakes.

Entrepreneurs & Founders Therapy

How Choices Drain Self-Control (Vohs 2008)

Vohs and colleagues' foundational experiments on choice-induced depletion. Each decision draws from a limited resource that recovery takes time to restore.

Vohs et al. (2008) JPSP

Ego Depletion: Meta-Analytic Evidence (Hagger 2010)

Hagger's Psychological Bulletin meta-analysis on the strength model of self-control. Context for how repeated choices reduce later capacity.

Hagger et al. (2010) Psychological Bulletin

Questions

Is this decision fatigue, or am I just avoiding hard choices?

Sometimes it can be both. Avoidance is one of the ways depletion may show up, especially when saying no, pushing back, or comparing options would take more energy. If you notice better judgment earlier and more automatic avoidance after many decisions, load is likely part of the pattern. That does not excuse the choice; it helps explain how to address it.

Why can I think clearly in the morning and then default by late afternoon?

This pattern fits the idea that repeated choices and acts of self-control can reduce later effortful judgment. Founder days also stack interpersonal, operational, and strategic decisions together, so the shift may be gradual rather than obvious. By late afternoon, the system may prefer closure, familiarity, and lower friction over a full re-evaluation of the options.

Can many small interpersonal decisions drain me as much as a few major strategic ones?

Yes, they can. The source material for this concern points to the cumulative effect of decision volume, not only the size of any single choice. A long stretch of small people decisions, requests, approvals, and boundary calls can quietly erode the same capacity you would want available for larger strategic judgment.

How do I know when I should pause a decision instead of pushing through?

Useful signs include wanting relief more than fit, feeling unable to hold the tradeoffs in mind, noticing that the first available option suddenly seems good enough, or feeling that explanation and pushback are too expensive. If the decision is not urgent, pausing may protect quality better than forcing certainty from a depleted state.

Will more sleep fix this, or do I need real reductions in decision volume?

Sleep may help baseline capacity, but it may not be the whole answer if the issue is chronic recurring decision load. The concern framing itself raises the question of whether recovery alone is enough or whether genuine off-time and structural reductions in decision volume are also needed. For many people, both recovery and better decision design matter.

What if slowing down feels risky because I lead the company or team?

That fear makes sense, especially when leadership already carries pressure around outcomes and control. Slowing down here does not mean becoming indecisive everywhere. It usually means being more selective: protecting higher-capacity windows for the calls that matter most, while reducing unnecessary choice load so fatigue is not setting direction for you.

Can therapy help if the problem looks practical on the surface but turns into shame or loss of control underneath?

Yes. This concern often has a practical layer and a deeper meaning layer. Therapy can help with decision architecture, timing, and boundaries while also addressing the beliefs that make everyday choices feel like tests of adequacy, failure, or control. That combination can reduce both depleted defaults and the self-attack that often follows them.


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Authored by

ShiftGrit Clinical Editorial Team

The ShiftGrit Clinical Editorial Team combines the insight of registered psychologists, provisional psychologists, and trained writers to create accessible, evidence-informed therapy resources. All content is clinically reviewed by a Registered Psychologist.