the neuroscience of better decisions
March 22, 2026 · online · 7 PM CET
Three years from now, will anything be
Learn the neuroscience formula that turns the goals you keep carrying into the life you're actually living.
You've known for a while. These are the patterns that keep it from happening.
"I'll get to it after this quarter."
You keep pushing the meaningful stuff behind the "urgent" stuff. Three quarters later, same story. The calendar resets but the list doesn't.
"I'm doing everything right. So why does nothing move?"
You're getting things done all day. Just never the thing. Your brain will always choose the familiar task over the uncertain one, and it will do that on repeat without you even noticing.
"I'm not procrastinating, I'm just busy."
You’ve got a full calendar, long days, and a list that never gets shorter. And somehow the one thing you’ve been meaning to get to has been sitting in the same place for months.
"I used to be sharper. Hungrier."
Decision fatigue is real. Your brain is spending its best resources on things that don’t matter, and you’re running on fumes for the ones that do.
"I just need the right moment to start."
Next week, next month, when things slow down a bit. The waiting feels logical every single time. That's the part nobody tells you: your brain is very good at making delay feel completely reasonable.
"What if this is just what it looks like now?"
A thought most people have but never say out loud. Your brain has a very specific reason for making a temporary pattern feel like a permanent one, and your brain can unlearn it.