There's always a reason the moment isn't quite right. The project isn't finished. The team is in transition. The market is uncertain. The personal situation needs more stability. Each reason is real, and each one, when it resolves, tends to be followed by another one.
"Now isn't the right time" is one of the most sophisticated thoughts a decision loop produces. It borrows the language of prudence and patience. It references actual conditions. It feels responsible. And for some people, it has been the primary reason a career decision hasn't moved in years.
This session examines the structure of timing reasoning: how to tell the difference between a genuine constraint and a loop-generated one, what the delay is actually protecting, and what it would take to make the decision without waiting for a moment that keeps moving.
What you'll leave with:
• A concrete framework for distinguishing a real timing constraint from a loop-generated one
• Recognition of what the delay has been protecting — and what it's been costing
• A clear next step that doesn't require the timing to be perfect first