People I've Loved How to Decide Deck (1 pc)
People I've Loved How to Decide Deck - Deck contents shown on white table
People I've Loved How to Decide Deck - Contents of Deck spread out into grid
People I've Loved How to Decide Deck - Model holding two cards from deck
People I've Loved How to Decide Deck - Cards from deck spread out and overlapping
People I've Loved How to Decide Deck (1 pc)
People I've Loved How to Decide Deck - Deck contents shown on white table
People I've Loved How to Decide Deck - Contents of Deck spread out into grid
People I've Loved How to Decide Deck - Model holding two cards from deck
People I've Loved How to Decide Deck - Cards from deck spread out and overlapping
$20.00 Sale Save

How to Decide Deck

SKU: 49794

Size 1 pc
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HOW TO DECIDE - A deck to help with the hard choices.

Measures approx.: 5" L x 1" H x 3.5" W.
Life is complicated and certainty is an illusion. In shaping our futures, the only thing within our actual control is the ability to decide “this” versus “that.” But how do we do that well?

The How To Decide deck offers different frameworks for thinking about the situation you are in and picking a route forward. When you feel stuck, choose an exercise or thought-experiment and see what comes up.

The opposite of a crystal ball, this deck will help you compare different possible futures and empower you to take your decisions into your own two hands—no matter how chaotic the world may seem.

ABOUT ANNIE DUKE
Anne Duke is researcher in cognitive-behavioral decision science and the best-selling author of the books Thinking In Bets, How to Decide, & Quit.

- 50 paper cards with prompts.
- 1 instructional pamphlet.
The company is made up of a few human beings longing for connection / a small printmaking workshop based out of Oakland, California. They specialize in hand-printed & assembled objects, and they're blessed to be able to make them in a small studio by an Oakland farmhouse with a lemon tree. People I've Loved 's works (or pressing issues) intend to facilitate the communication between real, tactile people. Not that they want to deny people their digital selves, they just think there can be room for both.