#Paralysis March 8
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March 2026 marks the 75th consecutive month that Jeff Neelon, Jaclyn Donovan, and I have completed a 30-Day Coach4aday Challenge. For this milestone month, we’ve chosen to focus on teaching. Each day for 30 days, we will share one lesson, principle, or insight gained from the previous 74 challenges—calling it the 30-Day Coach4aday Teach It Challenge. For each of us we believe that our own personal growth increases when we share it. Today it is sharing the cause of PARALYSIS by Analysis.

People from the beginning of time have fretted and worried over certain decisions. Worry about a decision usually comes from one of three places: fear of making the wrong choice, fear of judgment, or fear of uncertainty. You may not eliminate those fears completely—but you can manage them. That fear is often rationalized as analysis.
The phrase “paralysis by analysis” is generally attributed to H. Igor Ansoff, a mathematician and business strategist, who used the term in his 1965 book Corporate Strategy: An Analytic Approach to Business Policy for Growth and Expansion.
“Teach It” 30 Day Challenge Guidelines
In past challenges, we invited others to join us, though participation has been limited. This month, the three of us will return to January 2020—the very beginning—and move forward to the present, reflecting along the way and sharing a life lesson or insight from any month with one another.
Here is how we will do it.
- Identify the principle, insight, or lesson from a previous 30-Day Challenge-identify the Challenge also.
- Teach that lesson to each of us.
- Share the conversation by posting on social media with the hashtag #Coach4adayChallenge
Day 8-Paralysis caused by Worry
Our lives are filled with decisions. There is no doubt that it is prudent to gather information about any important decision. Sometimes too much worry about what to decide cause us to freeze up and do nothing or put off what should not be put off.
There are many passages in the bible about anxiety, fear, and worry. One verse I am fond of is found below:
“Do not be anxious about anything, but in every situation, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God. “-Philippians 4:6-7
Tips to minimize Worry
1. Clarify What You Can Control
Separate what’s in your control (effort, preparation, attitude) from what’s not (other people’s reactions, every possible outcome). Focus only on your lane.
2. Set a Decision Deadline
Endless thinking fuels anxiety. Give yourself a reasonable timeframe to gather information, then commit. Once the decision is made, shift your energy to execution—not second-guessing.
3. Define Your Values First
Ask: Which option aligns most with who I want to be?
When decisions align with your identity and values, regret decreases—even if outcomes aren’t perfect.
4. Accept That No Choice Is Risk-Free
Every path carries trade-offs. Peace doesn’t come from finding the “perfect” option; it comes from accepting that growth often includes discomfort.

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