Sunday, April 5, 2026

Economic forecast for the US and suggestions

 

Here's a custom dual-line graph synthesizing the US Conference Board Leading Economic Index (LEI) and Coincident Economic Index (CEI) from January 2020 to January 2026 (both indexed to 2016=100). This visualization highlights their relationship and forecasting value.




How LEI and CEI Correlate and Serve as a Forecast Tool. Historical Relationship: The LEI is designed to lead the business cycle by roughly 6–12 months, anticipating turns in economic activity. The CEI reflects current conditions (via employment, income, sales, and production). In normal cycles, the LEI rises/falls before the CEI does, providing an early warning.
2020–2021 (Pandemic Shock): Both dropped sharply in early 2020, but the LEI recovered faster initially and peaked in late 2021, while the CEI continued rising more steadily.
2022–2026 (Post-Peak Divergence): The LEI has trended downward since its ~118 peak (signaling headwinds like weak consumer expectations, softer housing/manufacturing orders). Meanwhile, the CEI has continued a modest upward climb to 115.3, confirming the economy is still expanding in the present.
Current Signal (as of Jan 2026): This classic divergence—declining LEI + rising (but slowing) CEI—suggests positive current conditions but softening momentum ahead. The LEI's six-month contraction has moderated (–1.3% through Jan 2026 vs. steeper prior drops), with improving diffusion (7/10 components positive). The CEI grew +0.3% in Jan and +0.3% over six months, with broad strength.

This pattern aligns with The Conference Board's outlook: ongoing expansion but at a slower pace (~2.0% real GDP growth forecast for 2026, below 2025 levels), with potential further moderation due to policy uncertainties, energy risks, and persistent drags on the LEI. It has not yet triggered a strong recession signal (which historically requires sharper, more prolonged LEI weakness with widespread component declines). The synthesis shows the LEI acting as a forward-looking gauge while the CEI validates real-time activity. When the LEI consistently leads downward turns in the CEI, slowdowns or recessions often follow (with NBER confirming peaks/troughs later).


In addition:

Given a moderating LEI alongside a still-growing CEI, a free market economist would recommend letting price signals do the heavy lifting while removing man‑made frictions that impede reallocation and productivity. The stance is: avoid new demand-side stimulus, commit to predictable rules, and push hard on supply-side liberalization to sustain expansion without reigniting inflation or misallocating capital [2].

Monetary policy: rules, not discretion

  • Keep policy credibly focused on price stability and a rules-based approach (e.g., a reaction function that respects incoming inflation and labor-market data), avoiding premature easing that would distort term structure signals; let market rates move freely and continue normalizing the balance sheet predictably to reduce allocative distortions from an outsized central bank footprint [3].
  • Do not engage in targeted credit facilities or sector-specific support; allow relative prices to adjust so resources reallocate from low-productivity to higher-productivity uses as momentum cools [1].

Fiscal policy: restrain, simplify, and de-bias toward investment

  • Impose a real, enforceable cap on primary spending growth below trend nominal GDP growth to stabilize debt without tax hikes that blunt incentives; avoid deficit-financed “stabilization” that chases a slowing but expanding economy [5].
  • Strengthen incentives to produce: make full and immediate expensing for structures/equipment/software permanent; lower marginal tax rates on work, saving, and risk-taking; simplify the code by sunsetting narrow credits and industrial-policy carveouts that skew capital allocation [5].
  • Provide policy certainty: adopt multi-year budgeting rules and automatic sunsets of emergency programs to reduce risk premia and planning uncertainty [2].

Regulatory and structural supply-side reforms

  • Energy and infrastructure: fast-track permitting (firm timelines, judicial review limits, shot clocks), liberalize siting for pipelines, transmission, LNG export capacity, nuclear (including SMRs), geothermal, and refining; categorically reject price controls and windfall taxes that suppress supply responses and amplify volatility [4].
  • Housing and local land use: preempt or condition federal grants on removal of exclusionary zoning and parking mandates; expand by-right approvals to unlock multifamily supply and ease labor mobility across regions [6].
  • Labor markets: roll back unnecessary occupational licensing, enable interstate license reciprocity, and remove hours/location mandates that reduce matching efficiency; encourage work through neutral tax/benefit design rather than targeted subsidies [6].
  • Trade and supply chains: lower tariffs and quotas, streamline customs and mutual recognition of standards, and avoid export controls except for narrow, clearly defined national security; open markets cushion energy and goods-price shocks and support productivity [2].

Financial sector discipline

  • Maintain credible resolution regimes without ad hoc guarantees; price deposit insurance to risk, allow poorly run institutions to exit, and avoid macroprudential credit allocation that props up zombies and drags on productivity [3].

Energy risk management without distortion

  • Allow long-dated contracting, hedging, and infrastructure buildout to manage energy risk; do not suppress prices or ration; if policymakers insist on climate measures, prefer simple, technology-neutral, market-based approaches while eliminating subsidies and mandates that pick winners [1].

Contingency if the LEI turns decisively negative and breadth deteriorates

  • Let relative prices and wages adjust; accelerate reallocation by temporarily lifting administrative bottlenecks (permitting, licensing, zoning) rather than adding demand stimulus; keep any safety net responses rules-based and time-limited to avoid moral hazard and preserve market signals [4][6].

Guidance for firms and investors in a slowing-but-growing backdrop

  • Prioritize productivity-enhancing capex (automation, software, energy efficiency), maintain pricing flexibility, and avoid leverage that assumes persistent top-line growth; hedge energy exposures via market instruments, not via regulatory lobbying [5].
  • Watch market signals more than official forecasts: credit spreads, market-based inflation expectations, and breadth in leading indicators; be prepared for wider dispersion across sectors as policy support recedes and relative prices reset [2].

Bottom line: stay the course on monetary discipline, avoid new demand-side interventions, and double down on pro-competition, pro-entry, supply-side liberalization to keep the expansion going at a sustainable, market-driven pace even as momentum cools [1][2][3][4][5][6].

Sources

1
Man, Economy, and State with Power and Market, Scholar's Edition, by Murray Rothbard


2
Human Action, Third Revised Edition by Ludwig Von Mises


3
Capitalism by George Reisman


4
Economic Thought Before Adam Smith by Murray Rothbard


5
Classical Economics by Murray Rothbard


6
The Birth of Plenty by William J. Bernstein

Saturday, April 4, 2026

A plan to help calm pathological Trump Derangement Syndrome meltdowns

 A plan to calm, severe pathological Trump Derangement Syndrome meltdowns


I hear the uneasiness: living with a strong dislike of President Trump feels draining and hijacks attention. You want your peace and agency back, without betraying your values. Let’s turn that wish into a clear, workable path.

  1. Clarify the Well-Formed Outcome (what “overcome” means to you)
  • Positive and specific (example you can tweak):
    • “When I see or hear the President mentioned, I stay calm and steady. I can read or hear opposing views without spiraling, respond respectfully if needed, and return my focus within two minutes.”
  • Sensory-based evidence:
    • Body: shoulders unclenched, breathing slow, knot in stomach ≤ 3/10.
    • Behavior: I can skim two articles or have a 10‑minute chat without raised voice or rumination afterward.
    • Attention: I shift to my priorities within two minutes 8 times out of 10.
  • Self-initiated:
    • This is about your responses (breath, attention, language, choices), not changing the President or the news.
  • Context:
    • Triggers: headlines, social feeds, family conversations, images, speeches.
  • Ecology check (fit with your values):
    • Keep what matters: civic engagement, caring about issues.
    • Avoid what harms: chronic outrage, relationship strain, lost focus.
  • Finish this sentence: “I’ll know I’ve succeeded when… (clear signs you can observe).”

Quick compare to anchor your target:

  • Current: spikes of anger or dread, doomscrolling, tense conversations, lost time.
  • Desired: calm body, brief informed check-ins, respectful talk or easy disengagement, attention back on what you value.
  1. Build a Compelling Future (make the calm outcome emotionally magnetic)
  • Sit comfortably. Imagine an everyday trigger (a headline). Now:
    • Make the mental image a bit smaller and farther; dim the colors and turn down the “volume.”
    • Bring a bright, close, first-person image of you responding calmly: relaxed shoulders, steady breath, neutral inner voice saying, “I’ve got this.” Feel that ease spread through chest and jaw. Hear yourself reply with one sentence or choose not to engage. Then watch your attention flow back to something you care about today.
    • Turn up the brightness and size of that calm-you image; let it fill your field of view. Lock in the feeling for 10 slow breaths.
  • Rehearse this 60–90 seconds daily so your nervous system learns the new pattern.
  1. Plan the means (allocate time/energy; tradeoffs and first steps)
  • Baseline (3 days):
    • Log exposures and rate arousal 0–10; note trigger, body sensation, what you did next, minutes lost.
    • This reveals where the biggest marginal gains are (e.g., late-night scrolling).
  • Daily 10-minute practice stack (one small session, consistency beats intensity):
    1. Regulate body (2 minutes):
      • Physiological sigh twice, then 6 slow breaths (4-second inhale, 6–8-second exhale).
    2. Label and distance (1 minute):
      • “I’m noticing anger,” “I’m having the thought that…,” said in a calm inner voice.
    3. Reappraise (3 minutes):
      • Write: Trigger → Automatic story → 2–3 alternative, still-plausible stories that don’t require malice.
      • Add: “What value in me is being poked here?” (fairness, honesty, security, etc.)
    4. Submodalities/NLP (2 minutes):
      • Shrink/dim the trigger image; enlarge/brighten the calm self-image you rehearsed. Keep the calm image dominant.
    5. “Swish” pattern (2 minutes):
      • See the trigger image small and dark in the lower left of your mind’s screen.
      • See vivid, first‑person “calm, values-led you” big and bright center‑right.
      • Say “swish,” rapidly dim/shrink the trigger as you snap the calm image to full brightness front and center. Do 5 quick reps, then test with a light trigger.
  • Media hygiene (opportunity cost management):
    • Replace open‑ended scrolling with two scheduled 15–20 minute news windows/day.
    • Remove rage-bait: unfollow/comment mutes; block autoplay; keep sources high-quality.
    • Add friction: move apps to a folder named “Decide First,” sign out, use grayscale at night.
  • Exposure with response prevention (gradual, 7–14 days):
    • Tier 1 (days 1–4): brief neutral mentions; practice the calm protocol; exit after 5 minutes.
    • Tier 2 (days 5–9): one balanced article; breathe, label, reappraise; exit after 10 minutes.
    • Tier 3 (days 10–14): short clip or a tougher article; same process; exit mindfully.
    • Log arousal and “time to calm.” Aim for ≤ 3/10 within 2 minutes by week two.
  • Language shifts (shapes feeling):
    • Replace global labels (“always,” “disgusting”) with specific behaviors or policies (“I disagree with X because…”).
    • Use “could be wrong, and here’s my best case.”
  • Values-based redirection (keep engagement, drop hostility):
    • Channel 1–2 hours/week into concrete issue-level action or community service that reflects your values. Tangible, local, and constructive lowers helplessness and resentment.
  • Conversation protocol:
    • STOP: Stop, Take one slow breath, Observe body tension, Proceed deliberately.
    • Ask-curious: “What’s most important to you about this?” Paraphrase before replying.
    • Pre‑set boundaries: “Happy to pause politics tonight; let’s enjoy dinner.”
  1. 14-day sprint (simple checklist)
  • Daily: 10‑minute practice + visualization; log one exposure; score arousal and time-to-calm.
  • 3 days/week: one values action (even 20 minutes).
  • End of week review: What trigger produced the biggest time sink? What change gave the biggest calm gain? Adjust one lever (e.g., move news window earlier).
  1. Obstacles and how to handle them
  • “This feels fake.” Good—your brain is learning a new pattern. Keep reps short and consistent; test with light triggers first.
  • “I slipped and ranted.” Great data. Log it, run the 2‑minute reset (two sighs + one reappraisal), and take one immediate values action to reclaim agency.
  • “The dislike is tied to past experiences.” Consider a few sessions with a therapist; targeted work (e.g., CBT/ACT) can accelerate this.
  1. Immediate next actions (pick one now)
  • A) Write your success evidence: “I’ll know I’ve succeeded when…” with 3 clear signs.
  • B) Schedule two 15–20 minute news windows on your calendar for the next 7 days; delete other news apps from the home screen.
  • C) Do the 90‑second Compelling Future rehearsal once right now.

Friday, April 3, 2026

Praxeology + thymology + neuro-linguistic programming (NLP)

Here is the accurate, complete sequence of action according to Misesian praxeology (with thymology integrated where it applies to content):
  1. The actor experiences uneasiness (or dissatisfaction with the current state of affairs). This is the ultimate driver of action in praxeology—action is always aimed at removing or alleviating some felt uneasiness. (This is implicit in the action axiom and not always listed explicitly, but it grounds everything.)
  2. The individual chooses (or adopts) specific ends (goals, desired future states that would reduce uneasiness). Ends are subjective and heterogeneous. Praxeology assumes ends exist and are ranked; it does not dictate what they are. Thymology enters here to understand the concrete motivations, ideas, emotions, or cultural/historical factors shaping which ends a particular person values (e.g., why one person prioritizes health while another prioritizes status).
  3. The actor forms a subjective hierarchy (or scale) of values/preferences among possible ends. This is an ordinal ranking (A > B > C, not cardinal measurement). The hierarchy reflects the relative urgency or importance the actor attaches to removing different instances of uneasiness. Action demonstrates this scale—praxeology deduces that people always act to satisfy the most highly ranked end attainable with available means. The scale is not fixed or independent; it manifests only in actual choices and can shift over time.
  4. Marginal utility is imputed to (scarce) means based on their contribution to the hierarchy of ends. Means (resources, goods, time, labor) derive their value from the ends they serve. For any homogeneous supply of a good, the actor allocates units successively to successively less urgent (lower-ranked) ends. The marginal utility of a unit is thus the importance of the least urgent end that would be satisfied by that unit (or, equivalently, the end that would go unsatisfied if one unit were lost). This is where the law of diminishing marginal utility arises praxeologically: additional units of a means can only serve less valuable remaining ends, so their imputed value falls. Ends determine the value of means—not vice versa. Marginal utilities are the mechanism by which ends' hierarchy is applied to concrete, divisible means.
  5. The actor chooses the course of action (selects specific means and employs them toward the highest-ranked attainable end, considering opportunity costs, time preference, uncertainty, etc.). Choice reveals the preference ranking. Praxeology analyzes the logical implications (e.g., no one acts to achieve a lower-ranked end when a higher one is possible). Thymology again helps explain the specific content of the choice in historical or individual contexts.

 The praxeological chain (with thymological elements) is a formal, logical description of the universal structure of any purposeful human action under scarcity. It is a priori and value-free: it explains what must logically be true for any action to occur, without specifying the content of motivations or how people subjectively experience the process.


The NLP chain—"wishing → wanting → planning → acting → having"—is a practical, psychological, and motivational sequence drawn from Neuro-Linguistic Programming (a modeling and change-technology approach focused on how people think, feel, communicate, and reprogram their internal states and behaviors). It describes a common subjective progression many people go through when moving from vague desire to tangible results. It is more experiential, sequential, and intervention-oriented (NLP often uses it to design techniques for overcoming procrastination, building motivation, or aligning internal states with outcomes).Relationship Between the Two ChainsThey are highly compatible and overlapping, but they operate at different levels of analysis:
  • Praxeology + Thymology provides the deep logical skeleton (what must happen in any choice).
  • NLP chain provides a surface-level psychological pathway (how it often feels and unfolds in the mind, and how to facilitate or optimize it).
Mapping the chains side-by-side (approximate correspondences):
  1. Uneasiness (praxeology)
    → Triggers the whole process. In NLP terms, this often shows up as initial discomfort or dissatisfaction that sparks wishing.
  2. Choosing/adopting specific ends (praxeology) + thymological content (why this particular goal?)
    Wishing (vague, passive desire: "I wish things were different" or "I wish I had X").
    This is the earliest, least committed stage—still daydream-like.
  3. Forming a subjective hierarchy of values/preferences (praxeology)
    Wanting (stronger, more emotional commitment: "I want this enough to prioritize it").
    Here the end moves up the value scale; thymology explains the personal/emotional reasons (beliefs, identity, emotions) that turn a wish into a motivating want. NLP techniques often target this shift (e.g., via submodalities, anchoring, or reframing to intensify desire).
  4. Imputing marginal utility to means + considering scarcity, opportunity cost, time, uncertainty (praxeology)
    Planning (developing concrete strategies, steps, resources, and contingencies to achieve the end).
    This is where the actor translates the ranked end into a feasible course of action. Praxeology deduces that planning must respect diminishing marginal utility and trade-offs; NLP treats planning as a skill to model and improve (e.g., well-formed outcomes, chunking down goals, aligning logical levels).
  5. Choosing and executing the course of action (praxeology: employing means toward the highest-ranked attainable end)
    Acting (taking concrete steps, behaving in alignment with the plan).
    Action is the observable demonstration of the entire prior chain. Praxeology emphasizes that we only know the true value hierarchy from what is actually chosen in action. NLP focuses on removing internal barriers to action (e.g., state management, strategy elicitation) and making action more effective or automatic.
  6. Achieving the end / reducing uneasiness (implied in praxeology)
    Having (possessing the result, experiencing the desired state/outcome).
    In praxeology, "having" means the end is attained, uneasiness is removed (at least temporarily), and new ends may arise. In NLP, "having" often includes the sensory experience of success and integration into one's life/identity, which can reinforce future cycles.
Key Differences and Complementary Strengths
  • Level of analysis: Praxeology is universal and deductive—it applies to all human action, including unemotional or routine choices, and says nothing about how to change motivation. The NLP chain is descriptive/psychological—it models how many (but not all) people subjectively experience goal pursuit and provides tools to intervene (e.g., if someone is stuck in "wishing" without reaching "wanting").
  • Role of subjectivity: Thymology in the Austrian framework already bridges to the concrete "why" and mental content (wishes, desires, plans). NLP dives much deeper into the linguistic and neurological patterning of those mental states—how language shapes internal representations, how submodalities (brightness, size, location of mental images) affect intensity of wanting, etc.
  • Static vs. dynamic/process-oriented: The praxeological chain is a logical structure revealed in every act. The NLP chain is a change process or strategy that can be repeated, refined, or "installed" (e.g., via anchoring chains or modeling successful people).
  • Additions needed? Neither chain is "wrong," but combining them gives a fuller picture:
    • Start with praxeological uneasiness → NLP wishing/wanting (thymological motivation building).
    • Value hierarchy + marginal utility → NLP planning (practical strategy under real constraints).
    • Action → NLP acting/having (with feedback loops for adjustment).
In short: The praxeological chain explains why and how any purposeful behavior is logically possible. The NLP chain describes one common psychological route through which people build motivation and execute that behavior, with tools to make the transitions smoother. They reinforce each other well—praxeology keeps the NLP model grounded in the inescapable logic of choice and scarcity, while NLP offers applied techniques for the thymological/psychological side (making abstract ends feel vivid and actionable).

In addition:
Here is how and where compelling futures, well-formed outcomes, and well-formedness criteria fit into the chains.
Compelling Futures, Well-Formed Outcomes, and Well-Formedness Criteria are powerful NLP tools that primarily enhance the early and middle parts of both the praxeological chain and the NLP wishing → wanting → planning → acting → having chain. They act as refiners and amplifiers that turn vague desires into clear, motivating, achievable ends—making the logical structure of action (praxeology) far more effective in practice.Quick Definitions (NLP Context)
  • Well-Formed Outcomes (or Well-Formedness Criteria): A structured set of conditions for defining a goal so it is clear, motivating, and workable for the unconscious mind. Common criteria include:
    • Stated in positive terms (what you want, not what you want to avoid).
    • Self-initiated and maintained (within your control or influence).
    • Specific and sensory-based (clear evidence: what you will see, hear, feel when achieved).
    • Contextualized (when, where, with whom).
    • Ecological (fits with the rest of your life/values; preserves positive by-products; no major negative side-effects).
    • Often includes compelling quality (it pulls you toward it emotionally).
  • Compelling Futures: A vivid, emotionally charged mental representation of the desired future state. It uses submodalities (making mental images brighter, closer, larger, more colorful, associated, etc.) and future-pacing to make the outcome feel irresistibly attractive and believable right now. It creates a strong "pull" that boosts motivation and aligns internal states.
These tools do not replace the chains—they optimize them, especially by strengthening the transition from weak wishing to strong wanting, and from wanting to effective planning.How They Integrate into the ChainsHere's the combined, enhanced chain showing exactly where Compelling Futures and Well-Formed Outcomes / Well-Formedness Criteria fit:
  1. Uneasiness / Dissatisfaction (Praxeology – the universal starting point)
    → Sparks the NLP process.
    NLP tools here: Minimal direct role, but awareness of uneasiness can trigger the desire to create a better future.
  2. Choosing / Adopting specific ends (Praxeology)
    • Wishing (vague, passive desire in the NLP chain)
      Well-Formed Outcomes process is applied here as a shaping tool.
      You take a raw wish ("I wish I were fitter") and refine it using well-formedness criteria into a precise, positive, sensory-rich end ("I easily run 5km three times a week feeling strong and energized, starting next Monday in my local park").
      This step makes the end specific, controllable, and ecologically sound, preventing fuzzy or self-sabotaging goals.
  3. Forming a subjective hierarchy of values (Praxeology – ranking ends)
    • Wanting (emotional commitment in the NLP chain)
      Compelling Futures is the key amplifier here.
      Once you have a well-formed outcome, you vividly construct and "step into" the future representation—making the mental movie so attractive, emotionally charged, and neurologically compelling that the end rises sharply in your value hierarchy.
      Submodalities adjustments (brighter colors, closer distance, associated feelings, adding sound/physiology) turn a "nice-to-have" into a "must-have" that pulls you forward. This creates strong internal motivation and congruence.
  4. Imputing marginal utility to means + considering scarcity, opportunity costs, time, uncertainty (Praxeology)
    • Planning (NLP chain)
      → Well-formedness criteria continue to support this stage strongly.
      The criteria force you to identify resources needed, first steps, evidence procedures ("How will I know I'm on track?"), and ecological checks ("Does this conflict with other high-value ends?").
      Compelling Futures keeps the emotional energy high during planning, reducing procrastination and helping you allocate scarce means (time, energy, money) preferentially to this now-highly-ranked end.
  5. Choosing and executing the course of action (Praxeology)
    • Acting (NLP chain)
      → The compelling quality and clear evidence criteria from the prior steps make action more automatic and congruent. Future-pacing (a common companion to compelling futures) mentally rehearses successful action, installing positive expectations.
      Action still demonstrates the true value hierarchy (praxeology), but the NLP refinements reduce internal resistance.
  6. Achieving the end / Reducing uneasiness (Praxeology)
    • Having (NLP chain)
      → The sensory-based evidence procedure lets you clearly recognize and celebrate when the outcome is achieved. A well-formed, compelling future often leads to stronger satisfaction and positive reinforcement for future cycles. Ecology checks help ensure the "having" integrates well without unintended costs.
Summary of the Relationship
  • Well-Formed Outcomes / Well-Formedness Criteria primarily refine steps 2–4: They turn vague ends into logically sound, practical, and ecologically viable goals. This prevents common praxeological pitfalls like pursuing unattainable or contradictory ends, or misallocating means due to unclear valuation.
  • Compelling Futures primarily supercharges step 3 (value hierarchy / wanting): It uses NLP's modeling of subjective experience (submodalities, association, future pacing) to make the end emotionally magnetic, bridging the gap between intellectual choice of ends (praxeology) and felt motivation (thymology/NLP).
  • Together, they make the entire chain more efficient and robust. Praxeology explains why you must rank ends and choose means; these NLP tools give you practical methods to do it skillfully, aligning your subjective experience with the inescapable logic of action.
In practice, many coaches and self-improvers run the Well-Formed Outcome questions first (to clarify and structure the end), then build a Compelling Future (to intensify desire), which naturally flows into detailed planning and sustained action. This synthesis respects praxeology's formal structure while leveraging NLP's psychological technology for better real-world results.

Finally, here is an example of how to use this chain.
An individual would like to be more assertive.
  1. Step 1 — Understand your uneasiness and wish
    It sounds like you’re feeling the cost of staying quiet or accommodating too much and you want the skill (and permission) to state needs, boundaries, and opinions clearly without guilt. Great starting point.

  2. Step 2 — Shape a Well‑Formed Outcome (answer briefly)
    Reply with quick bullets to these:

  • Contexts: Where do you most want assertiveness first? (e.g., team meetings, with your manager, partner/family, clients, friends)
  • Behaviors: What would we see/hear you do? (e.g., “state my view within 60 seconds,” “say no without over‑explaining,” “make clear requests”)
  • Evidence: How will you know it’s working? (counts per week, feedback, feeling state)
  • Constraints/Ecology: Any relationships or values we must protect? Any downsides to avoid?
  • Timeline: By what date would a meaningful upgrade feel real?

Draft example you can edit:

  • “By June 30, 2026, in weekly team meetings and with my partner, I speak up within 60 seconds when I have a different view, make 1 clear request per day, and say ‘no’ or ‘not now’ at least 2 times per week when needed, using a calm tone and open posture. I’ll track reps in Notes and feel a steady 6/10 or higher calmness after these moments.”
  1. Step 3 — Build a Compelling Future (60‑second visualization)
  • Close your eyes. See a near‑future moment in first‑person where you state a boundary/request. Make the image bright, large, and close. Hear your voice: steady, warm, concise. Feel your feet grounded, shoulders open, breath low and slow.
  • Turn up the internal “click” of self‑respect right after you speak. Let that good feeling spread and linger.
  • Future‑pace: see tomorrow, next week, and a month from now—normal life but with you consistently asking, declining, and contributing with ease.
  • Anchor it: lightly press thumb and forefinger together at the peak of that feeling. Use this anchor before assertive moments.
  1. Step 4 — Plan using scarce means (time/energy/attention) and opportunity cost
  • Weekly “assertiveness reps” target: 10 small reps/week (asks, no’s, disagreement statements). Small beats heroic.
  • Allocate 30 minutes/week (two 15‑min blocks) to prep and review. Opportunity cost: you’ll trade a bit of inbox or scrolling time.
  • Choose one primary arena for the next 2 weeks (highest marginal utility): where a small increase pays big (e.g., with your manager or partner).
  1. Step 5 — Practical tools and scripts
    Core micro‑skills:
  • The 10‑second script (DEAR‑style): “In [situation], when [behavior/effect], I feel [feeling/impact]. I’d like [specific request].” Then be silent.
  • The clean “no”: “I’m not able to do that. I can offer X by Y.” (No justifying.)
  • The disagreement opener: “I see it differently—here’s my take…” (then one clear reason).
  • Broken record: calmly repeat your request or boundary up to three times.
  • Time‑out right: “I want to give this the thought it deserves. I’ll circle back by [time].”

Implementation intentions (use your anchor before you speak):

  • If a request comes that I don’t want, then I’ll pause, breathe out, and say, “I’m not able to do that; I can do X by Y.”
  • If I disagree in a meeting, then I’ll speak within 60 seconds using, “I see it differently—because [one reason].”
  • If someone pushes after my no, then I’ll repeat once and end with, “That’s my decision.”
  1. Step 6 — 14‑day starter plan (tiny, compounding wins)
    Week 1:
  • Day 1: Choose your arena and write 3 likely sentences you’ll use. Rehearse out loud twice.
  • Days 2–5: Do 1 micro‑rep/day (one ask, one no, or one dissent). Log it: date, what you said, how you felt before/after (0–10), what you’d keep/adjust.
  • Day 6: Role‑play one harder scenario with a friend or in front of your camera (two takes).
  • Day 7: Review logs. Identify your best phrase and keep it.

Week 2:

  • Increase to 2 reps/day (one small, one medium).
  • Add “speak up within 60 seconds” once in a meeting or conversation.
  • End‑of‑week review: Did reps ≥10? Calmness trend improving? One lesson to carry forward.

Handling common obstacles

  • Freeze response: pre‑load your first 7 words (“I see it differently—because…” or “I’m not able to do that.”). Breathe out as you begin.
  • Guilt spike: reframe—“Clear is kind. Ambiguous is unkind.” Preserve warmth in tone, not excess explanation.
  • Pushback: expect it; it means you’re changing the pattern. Return to your line once, then close.

Evidence and celebration

  • Scoreboard: track weekly reps and a “post‑conversation calm” rating. Success = ≥10 reps/week for 3 weeks and average calm ≥6/10.
  • Celebrate “having”: a small reward each week you hit the target (walk, playlist, treat, or time off).

Your move (quick answers help me tailor precisely):

  1. Which single arena do you want to start with for the next 2 weeks?
  2. What are two sentences you’d love to be able to say verbatim in that arena?
  3. By what exact date would you like to hit 10 reps/week consistently?

Economic forecast for the US and suggestions

  Here's a custom dual-line graph synthesizing the US Conference Board Leading Economic Index (LEI) and Coincident Economic Index (CEI) ...