Reversible Decision Mapper
Purpose
Reversible Decision Mapper helps a user stop overthinking by deciding how much analysis a choice deserves. It separates one-way decisions from two-way and sliding-door decisions, then recommends an action mode: decide now, run a small experiment, gather specific evidence, or escalate to an expert or stakeholder.
This is a prompt-only thinking framework. It does not make high-stakes decisions for the user.
Trigger
Use this skill when the user says things like:
- "I am overthinking this decision."
- "Is this reversible?"
- "Should I decide now or gather more information?"
- "Help me map a one-way versus two-way door decision."
- "I am stuck choosing between options."
- "What is the smallest safe experiment?"
- "How do I stop analysis paralysis?"
Inputs to Request
Ask for enough context to classify the decision:
- The decision in one sentence.
- Available options and the default if no action is taken.
- Deadline or time pressure.
- What could go wrong and how severe it would be.
- What would be required to reverse or repair the decision.
- Information gaps and what evidence would change the user's mind.
- Stakeholders affected by the decision.
- Whether the domain involves medical, legal, financial, safety, employment, housing, or other high-stakes consequences.
Deliverable
Produce a reversible decision map with:
- Decision statement.
- Option list and default path.
- Reversibility score.
- Downside severity.
- Cost of delay.
- Key information gaps.
- Door type: one-way, two-way, or sliding-door.
- Smallest safe experiment or rollback path.
- Decision deadline and evidence threshold.
- Recommended action mode: decide now, run experiment, gather evidence, or escalate.
- Brief rationale and review date.
Workflow
Step 1 - State the Decision Clearly
Rewrite the decision as one sentence using this pattern:
"Should I choose [option] instead of [alternative/default] by [date]?"
If the decision is actually several decisions, split it into separate decisions and map the first one that unlocks progress.
Step 2 - List Options and the Default
List each available option. Include the default if the user does nothing.
For each option, note:
- Main upside.
- Main downside.
- Who is affected.
- What commitment it creates.
- What would need to be true for it to be a good choice.
Step 3 - Score the Decision Factors
Use a simple 1 to 5 scale:
- Reversibility: 1 means easy to undo, 5 means hard or impossible to undo.
- Downside severity: 1 means minor inconvenience, 5 means severe harm or major loss.
- Cost of delay: 1 means waiting is cheap, 5 means waiting is costly.
- Information gap: 1 means enough information exists, 5 means major unknowns remain.
- Stakeholder impact: 1 means only the user is affected, 5 means many people or vulnerable people are affected.
Explain each score in plain language.
Step 4 - Classify the Door Type
Classify the choice:
- Two-way door: easy to reverse, low or moderate downside, safe to try quickly.
- Sliding-door: reversible only within a time window or with a known rollback cost.
- One-way door: hard to reverse, high downside, or major stakeholder impact.
If any factor is high-stakes, lean toward one-way or sliding-door until proven otherwise.
Step 5 - Find the Smallest Safe Experiment
For two-way and sliding-door decisions, identify a limited test:
- Trial period.
- Prototype.
- Pilot with a small group.
- Draft before commitment.
- Temporary schedule change.
- Small purchase before large purchase.
- Conversation before contract.
- Reversible version of the choice.
Name the success metric and stop condition.
Step 6 - Define Rollback or Repair Path
Describe how the user could undo, pause, or repair the decision:
- What must be preserved to reverse course?
- What deadline closes the rollback window?
- What cost would reversal create?
- Who needs advance notice?
- What documentation or agreement is needed?
If no credible rollback path exists, mark the decision as high caution.
Step 7 - Set Decision Deadline and Evidence Threshold
Prevent endless analysis by setting:
- Decision deadline.
- Evidence needed before the deadline.
- Evidence that would change the recommendation.
- What information is nice to have but not necessary.
- Review date after action.
Step 8 - Choose the Action Mode
Recommend one action mode:
- Decide now: reversible, low downside, or delay is more costly than error.
- Run experiment: reversible enough, but evidence would help.
- Gather evidence: information gap is high and evidence is obtainable before the deadline.
- Escalate: downside, irreversibility, or stakeholder impact is high enough to need expert or stakeholder review.
Step 9 - Draft the Decision Note
Provide a concise note the user can save:
- Decision.
- Chosen action mode.
- Scores and door type.
- Rationale.
- Experiment or rollback path.
- Deadline.
- Review date.
- Next physical action.
Safety Boundary
- Do not decide for the user in medical, legal, financial, safety-critical, housing, immigration, employment, or other high-stakes domains.
- Do not pressure the user into irreversible choices.
- If downside severity, irreversibility, or stakeholder impact is high, recommend qualified advice or stakeholder review.
- Treat uncertainty honestly. Do not convert missing information into confidence.
- If the user describes danger, coercion, self-harm risk, abuse, or urgent legal exposure, prioritize immediate human, professional, or emergency support.
Acceptance Criteria
A successful run includes:
- The decision is rewritten in one clear sentence.
- Options and the default path are listed.
- Reversibility, downside, delay cost, information gap, and stakeholder impact are scored.
- The decision is classified as one-way, two-way, or sliding-door.
- A smallest safe experiment or rollback path is identified when appropriate.
- A decision deadline and evidence threshold are set.
- The recommendation uses one of four action modes.
- High-stakes decisions are escalated rather than decided by the skill.