Let’s say that a friend of yours gives you some lottery tickets for Christmas. The draw’s in a week or so, so you open the rest of your gifts, spend the day with family and friends, and think no more of it. The day before the draw, you run into your friend again. You start talking, and you meander onto the topic of the lottery tickets, and they ask you what you’d spend the money on, if you won. You honestly reply that you hadn’t thought about it. And if you were in this situation, that’s probably exactly how you’d act. Maybe you’d say something about buying a house, or retiring, or donating most of it to your favorite charity, but you wouldn’t give the question a thorough analysis.
Act First, Think Later
Act First, Think Later
Act First, Think Later
Let’s say that a friend of yours gives you some lottery tickets for Christmas. The draw’s in a week or so, so you open the rest of your gifts, spend the day with family and friends, and think no more of it. The day before the draw, you run into your friend again. You start talking, and you meander onto the topic of the lottery tickets, and they ask you what you’d spend the money on, if you won. You honestly reply that you hadn’t thought about it. And if you were in this situation, that’s probably exactly how you’d act. Maybe you’d say something about buying a house, or retiring, or donating most of it to your favorite charity, but you wouldn’t give the question a thorough analysis.