Trusting Yourself After Being Wrong

Episode Description

What happens to your confidence after a decision doesn’t work?

In this episode of Decision Pause, we explore how difficult outcomes can quietly erode a parent’s trust in their own judgment. When something goes wrong—especially when it affects your child—it’s common to replay the decision again and again, questioning your instincts and wondering whether you should have known better.

But outcomes and decisions are not the same thing. Decisions are made with the information, capacity, and constraints available at the time. Outcomes, on the other hand, are shaped by many factors beyond any parent’s control.

This episode looks at how parents rebuild self-trust after a decision goes poorly, how to separate learning from self-punishment, and why thoughtful decision-making doesn’t require being right every time.

In This Episode

  1. Why difficult outcomes often lead parents to question their instincts
  2. The difference between a bad outcome and a bad decision
  3. How hindsight can create the illusion that the outcome was obvious
  4. Why losing trust in yourself can make future decisions even heavier
  5. How rebuilding self-trust starts with honesty rather than certainty

Key Takeaways

  1. A painful outcome does not automatically mean the decision itself was wrong
  2. Hindsight can distort how predictable the outcome actually was
  3. Learning from decisions is different from punishing yourself for them
  4. Self-trust grows through reflection, not perfection
  5. Parents often develop deeper discernment through decisions that didn’t work

A Question to Sit With

What did this decision teach me—without turning that lesson into a verdict about who I am?

What’s Next

In the next episode, we’ll talk about decision fatigue during long seasons of uncertainty—what happens when the decisions never really stop, and how parents pace themselves over time.

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Transcript

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Welcome to Decision Pause.

This is a podcast about real decisions made under real constraints — especially when you’re raising a neurodivergent child.

Today, I want to talk about something that can quietly undermine every future decision:

What happens to trust — your trust in yourself — after a decision doesn’t work.

If you’ve ever thought:

I should have known better.

I can’t believe I thought that would help.

Why do I keep getting this wrong?

You’re not alone.

And those thoughts don’t mean you’re careless or incapable.

They usually mean you’re trying to make sense of an outcome that hurt.

When a decision doesn’t work, parents often replay not just the decision — but their own judgment.

They start questioning:

their instincts

their competence

their ability to see clearly

And over time, that questioning can turn into hesitation.

Not because they don’t care —

but because trusting themselves feels dangerous.

Here’s something important to name:

A bad outcome does not automatically mean a bad decision.

Decisions are made with:

the information you have at the time

the capacity you’re carrying

the constraints you’re under

Outcomes, on the other hand, are shaped by many things you can’t control.

When those two get blurred, self-trust takes the hit.

Many parents quietly rewrite the past after something doesn’t work.

They think:

The signs were obvious.

I ignored my gut.

I should have listened to someone else.

But hindsight is powerful — and unfair.

It gives the illusion that the outcome was predictable, when it often wasn’t.

Losing trust in yourself can feel like the safest response.

If you don’t trust your judgment, maybe you won’t make the same mistake again.

But what actually happens is this:

Decisions get heavier.

Confidence erodes.

Outside voices get louder.

And choosing becomes even harder.

Rebuilding self-trust doesn’t mean pretending you were right.

It means telling the truth about how the decision was made.

You can say:

At the time, this choice made sense given what we knew and what we could carry.

That sentence doesn’t excuse harm.

It restores accuracy.

It’s also helpful to separate learning from self-punishment.

Learning sounds like:

Next time, I’ll watch for these signs.

This approach didn’t match our needs.

Self-punishment sounds like:

I always mess this up.

I can’t trust myself at all.

Only one of those helps you decide better in the future.

Trusting yourself again doesn’t require certainty.

It requires honesty.

Honesty about:

limits

uncertainty

the fact that you’re deciding in a complex system

Self-trust isn’t about being right every time.

It’s about knowing you’ll respond thoughtfully — even when things don’t go as planned.

I also want to say this:

Parents of neurodivergent children often learn more from decisions that don’t work than from ones that do.

Those experiences sharpen discernment.

They don’t disqualify you.

They deepen you.

If you’re struggling to trust yourself after a decision went poorly, here’s a gentle question to sit with:

What did this decision teach me — without turning that lesson into a verdict about who I am?

That distinction matters.

As we close today, I want to leave you with this permission:

You are allowed to trust yourself again — even if you’ve been wrong before.

Especially if you’ve been wrong before.

Because trust isn’t built on perfection.

It’s built on care, reflection, and the willingness to keep deciding thoughtfully.

In the next episode, we’ll talk about decision fatigue in long seasons — what happens when the decisions never really stop, and how parents pace themselves over time.

Until then, if self-doubt shows up as you’re deciding this week, see if you can meet it with a little more kindness.

This has been Decision Pause.

Thank you for listening — and we’ll pause again next time.