Orientation
Most mistakes are not failures of effort. They are failures of judgment. A man misreads a situation, assigns meaning too quickly, or draws a conclusion that is not supported. From there, his actions follow—and the outcome reflects the error upstream. This course isolates the most common distortions in thinking that lead to misjudgment. Not as abstract concepts, but as they actually appear in real situations: Assuming intent. Treating outcomes as proof of worth. Letting emotion stand in for evidence. Projecting failure into the future. Reducing situations to false choices. And more. Each module breaks down a specific error: How it shows up. Why it feels convincing. Where it fails. How to correct it. The goal is not to memorize categories. It is to recognize these patterns as they occur—and to interrupt them before they shape your action. This is a course in clarity. In separating what is real from what is added. In tightening judgment so that action follows correctly. If you improve how you see, you improve how you move. Everything else follows from that.