I’ve been debating whether to go to a revolving sushi bar for the past 2 hours. I still can’t decide, and lunch time is already over.
Welp, I guess I’m just having chips or something then.
Fighting MTL With Literacy Since 2017
I’ve been debating whether to go to a revolving sushi bar for the past 2 hours. I still can’t decide, and lunch time is already over.
Welp, I guess I’m just having chips or something then.
I’m in a pretty similar situation but with dinner
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I’m usually the one having to make the decision… My friends and family all just sit around asking each other where they wanna eat for so long that I have to take charge or else nothing will happen. For hours…
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The more you talk, the more I think you go to school in my town. Is the belt sushi any good? Haven’t tried it yet.
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Well, assuming you’re in Texas, I *might* be. The closest revolving sushi place to me is called Kura. It’s not bad.
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I’ve only eaten best sushi a few times but it’s a novel way to enjoy it
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Through much practice, I found out that it’s usually better to stop the deliberation process at some point, and just go with the gut feeling. Or if gut feeling can’t decide either, roll the dice.
Sure, it might be not the best decision, but decision-making time is also a resource that has its own costs. And these costs can easily outweigh the worth of the decision itself.
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