I'm curious, could you share more details about what patterns you observed, and which heuristics you actually seemed to use?
One thing I guess I could share:
I often make choices based on plans that I’m excited about at the time. But very frequently I don’t actually get very far with those plans before they peter out and falter / I move on to something else. When I am making choices about what to do, I should take my current plans with a grain of salt, because things actually change a lot from that initial vission.
I find that the greatest challenge in starting to employ something like this, is learning to recognize the things that count as decisions to be recorded. To the extent that they are not too private, could you share more examples of the kinds of decisions that you have used this on?
Here are some examples, though as I said, I think my own definition of a decision was too strict:
I think at least one trigger for flagging decisions might be something like "I'm about to 'pull the trigger' on something." I have some amount of indecision, or conflictedness, and then I settle into one state or another.
This reminds me of another issue. If you do make informed complicated decisions, the basis of these decisions might change over time. I struggle with that problem professionally. As an engineer I have to make complicated compromises/decisions. The trouble is that the situation changes all the time. The requirements and the means change. Without tracking why I made decisions there is no way to tell if those decisions still hold, because I do not even remember myself. The project becomes a zombie even before there are true legacy and hand-over issues. Usually decisions are incomprehensible later. We all know this and have though everyone else is an idiot, but often people had good reason to do it that way or lost track as described. Making changes to often reveals that there were reasons, but too late.
Privately you might find yourself in a place that you had reason to go into but those reasons went away without you noticing.
This was helpful for realizing that "my tendency to X is preemptively destroying most of the value might might create",
might might?
What was the tendency? (Or was this part just saying "noticing bad habits"?)
I fixed the typo.
At least for the time being, I'm abstracting the specifics from most of the things I learned, because they are pretty personal.
The technique
This post is signal-boosting and recommending a strategy for improving your decision making that I picked up from the entrepreneur Ivan Mazour. He describes the process here, and publishes his own results every year on his blog.
In his words...
Some theory
This accords with some abstract theory about human rationality. A perfect-Bayesian expected utility maximizer doesn't start out with an optimal policy. Rather, its strength is being able to learn from its experience (optimally), so that it converges towards the optimal policy.
Of course, humans have a number of limitations standing between us and perfect-decision-making-in-the-limit. Due to computational constraints, perfect Bayesian updating is out of reach. But among a number of limitations, the first and most fundamental consideration is "are you learning from your data at all?".
If the consequences of your decisions don't propagate back to the process(es) that you use to makes decisions, then that decision process isn't going to improve.
And I think that, by default, I mostly don't learn from my own experience, for a couple of reasons.
So I need some process, that involves writing things down, that allows me to intentionally implement back-propagation.
Personal experience
I only started logging my decisions a little more than year ago, and did the analysis for the end of 2018 this week, so I don't have that much personal experience to share. I'm sharing anyway, because it will be years until I have lots of experience with this technique.
That said,
Even given the issues I described above, I found the assessment activity to be extremely useful. There were some places where I was able to highlight "past Eli was flat-out wrong", and others where, having seen how things turned out, I could outline nuanced heuristics that take into account the right considerations in the right circumstances.
It also clearly affirmed two principles / hamming problems, that had occurred to me before, but hadn't really slapped my in the face. This was helpful for realizing that "my tendency to X is preemptively destroying most of the value I might create", which is an important thing to get to full conscious attention.
Good luck!