The Working Parent's Decision Tax
April 20, 2026
Most people assume decision fatigue comes from difficult problems.
But research suggests another major driver:
too many options, variables, and comparisons.
Studies on choice overload show that when people face large numbers of options, especially options with many attributes decision quality often declines. People delay choices, feel less confident, or avoid deciding altogether.
Difficulty matters.
But excess complexity amplifies cognitive strain.
Modern decision environments encourage expansion:
Ironically, adding tools meant to improve decisions can increase mental load.
Experimental research shows that repeatedly making choices can reduce persistence and performance on later tasks, suggesting that decision-making itself carries cognitive cost.
More choice does not always produce better judgment.
Sometimes it produces noise.
Josh Waitzkin’s Making Smaller Circles approach offers a different response.
Instead of accumulating techniques, the goal is to:
This is a learning framework rather than a clinical intervention, but it aligns with cognitive research showing that people become more efficient when attention focuses on predictive cues rather than all available information.
Clarity improves when irrelevant signals are filtered out.
Research on attention and learning suggests performance improves when individuals prioritize diagnostic information signals that reliably predict outcomes.
With experience, decision-makers often rely on fewer but more meaningful cues.
They are not processing more information.
They are processing better information.
This shift reduces cognitive effort while improving consistency.
As core patterns become familiar:
These outcomes are best understood as practical implications of learning efficiency rather than guaranteed effects.
But the direction is consistent across expertise research.
Depth reduces noise.
Repeated decision-making remains cognitively demanding.
Some studies suggest that making many choices can temporarily reduce persistence or self-control on later tasks highlighting the importance of managing mental effort across decision cycles.
Tools designed to support sustained engagement, such as Numin aim to help individuals remain mentally present during extended thinking and learning processes.
(This reflects design intention, not a clinical performance claim.)
Pignatiello, G. A., Martin, R. J., & Hickman, R. L. (2018). Decision Fatigue: A Conceptual Analysis. Nursing & Health Sciences.
Vohs, K. D., Baumeister, R. F., Schmeichel, B. J., et al. (2008). Making choices impairs subsequent self-control: A limited-resource account of decision making, self-regulation, and active initiative. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology.
Barattucci, M., et al. (2025). Clinical decision fatigue: a systematic and scoping review with meta-synthesis. Family Medicine and Community Health.
Chernev, A., Böckenholt, U., & Goodman, J. (2015). Choice overload: A conceptual review and meta-analysis. Journal of Consumer Psychology.
(Summary/teaching material based on Chernev et al.) “Choice Overload: Key Moderators and Effects.”
Fischer, C., et al. (2022). The Quest for Simplicity in Human Learning: Identifying the Constraints on Attention. Journal of Experimental Psychology: General.