I have held a delusional belief that thinking is the solution to everything. It is an even more toxic form of thinking “to find the solution to everything.” The first treats thought as the destination; the second smuggles in the same trap while pretending to be on the way somewhere.
Thinking became my excuse to avoid action: to procrastinate inside my comfort zone, to fantasize in thought, to sit at a computer pouring out words while changing nothing in the world. It wore the costume of diligence — which is exactly what made it so hard to catch.
Here is the uncomfortable arithmetic: additional ideas lose their weight while the current one sits untested. Every hour spent imagining a better approach is an hour the existing approach goes unexamined by reality. The thinker gets to feel productive — connections made, frameworks compared, possibilities mapped — while the scoreboard remains unchanged.
It is seductive because thinking carries no risk of failure. In your head, the idea stays pristine. The moment you act, it meets friction, ugliness, compromise. So you retreat to the drawing board — not because the plan needs more work, but because the drawing board is comfortable. And the retreat always carries a respectable-sounding reason, which is how it keeps getting away with it.
I still catch myself doing it. The awareness doesn’t cure the habit; it just makes the procrastination less comfortable. Which, perhaps, is enough to tip the balance toward doing something. (A discomfort I share with a friend’s thinking.)