If you are a procrastinator, you do not need to take more time to make decisions. In fact, you may need to practice making a series of quick decisions each day. Procrastinators tend to labor over things as simple as which shoes to put on, what to eat, whether to get up or sit down, and many other things for which another person may just do decisively. On the other hand, if you are a person who tends to make snap decisions and quick judgments, only to regret having moved to fast, then you may need to practice taking three to five minutes to step back and wait before making decisions whenever possible. Whatever our temperament or tendencies, a balance between our strengths and weaknesses is needed to be most effective, efficient, and disciplined for the success.
Perhaps the best way to determine how to be disciplined for this kind of balance is to do a self-assessment and then ask a friend or loved one who will be honest with you to evaluate your assessment of yourself. Then with their help, write a personal prescription for yourself for at least three doses a day, for thirty days, and I believe you will see your procrastination turn into progress or your rash decisions yield reasoned and remarkable results.
Write the prescription, take the proper decision-making dosage each day. As you regularly review and revise your personalized prescription, your discipline will always meet success along the way.