regretnot.me

Most decisions fail in the parts you never examined.

You already know how to think through a decision. You list the options. You weigh the pros and cons. You ask people you trust.

And then you avoid something. Not because you forgot, but because you sensed it would complicate things. You felt the question forming and steered around it. Easier to move forward without that weight.

That's the blind spot. Not what you couldn't see, but what you chose not to look at.

The person who regrets buying a house rarely says "I miscalculated the mortgage." They say "I never thought about what it would mean to be locked in."

We built this tool for decisions that are hard to reverse. Quitting a job. Making an investment. Ending a relationship. Moving somewhere new. The kind where getting it wrong is expensive — not always in money, but in time, in options, in who you become.

The tool doesn't tell you what to decide. It doesn't comfort you. It asks you questions — specifically, the ones that people in your situation tend to skip.

Some of those questions will feel irrelevant. Some will feel uncomfortable. That's often a signal.

We don't believe in decision paralysis. We believe in decision clarity. The goal is not to slow you down — it's to make sure that when you move, you've actually looked.

You'll leave with either grounded confidence or justified hesitation. Both are wins.

If you're making a decision that matters, you owe yourself the full picture. Not the comfortable one. The complete one.