As the day progresses, our ability to make high-quality decisions erodes—a phenomenon known as decision fatigue . If you are staring at a complex project at 4:00 PM, you aren't being lazy by stopping; you are being strategic. Pushing it to tomorrow ensures you tackle the hardest part of the work with a full "battery." How to Implement It

Ever noticed how your best ideas come in the shower? That’s the incubation effect. When you step away from a problem and "wait until tomorrow," your subconscious continues to work in the background. By morning, your brain has often organized the clutter into a creative solution you couldn't see the day before. 3. Defeating "Decision Fatigue"

We’ve all sent an email in the heat of the moment that we later regretted. By applying the "wait until tomorrow" rule to difficult conversations or stressful tasks, you allow your nervous system to reset. Scientific studies on affective forecasting suggest we are poor judges of how we will feel in the future; a night of sleep provides the emotional distance needed for clarity. 2. The Incubation Effect

If you want something non-essential, wait until tomorrow. If the urge is still there, buy it.