Using reflection, journaling, and deliberate thinking to sharpen leadership judgment instead of chasing hot takes.

A minimalist editorial illustration featuring a serene modern leader at a desk with an open journal, pen, hourglass, and stone, thoughtfully focused against a blurred rush of social media notifications and headlines, contrasting calm with chaos in clean vector flat design.

Hot takes are everywhere. In meetings, in group chats, and in that little voice that wants to answer right now so I look sharp.

But Leadership isn’t a speed contest. It’s quality is in the judgement.

When I practice Stoicism, I’m not trying to be slow for the sake of it. I’m trying to be accurate. I want the kind of thinking that still makes sense next week, next quarter, and over the long term.

This is the promise of Stoicism: I can act with urgency when needed, without letting urgency hijack my mind when it’s not.

Stoic intelligence: what it is and isn’t

Stoic intelligence is my ability to stay clear under pressure, separate facts from stories, and choose a response I can stand behind. It’s calm thinking with a backbone.

It’s also not the internet version of being Stoic, which often means be cold, emotionless, or act like nothing bothers you. The Stoics were practical, not numb.

That’s why slow thinking matters. Most bad calls don’t come from not being smart. They come from heat, ego, fear, and speed.

Why leaders need slow thinking

In a fast-paced culture, speed is often rewarded because it is perceived as confidence. The problem is that speed also multiplies error.

Two ideas from decision research help me explain what’s happening:

Cognitive biases: My brain takes shortcuts. I over-weight the most recent data, the loudest voice, or the first good enough plan.

Noise: Even if my values are steady, my judgments can swing with mood, time pressure, or who spoke right before me. Same leader, same problem, different day, different call.

Slow thinking doesn’t mean endless thinking. It means I create a short gap between stimulus and response, then I use that gap. The Stoics trained for that gap.

If you want a structured set of daily practices (morning intention, evening review, attention training), the Stoic Week 2014 Handbook is a solid reference, even if you only borrow a few pages.

The Pause–Label–Test–Choose checklist

When something spikes my emotions or my urgency, I run this simple loop. I keep it short so I’ll actually use it mid-day.

1) Pause to create the gap

I take one slow breath. I physically stop typing. If it’s a meeting, I sip water and let the silence do its job.

My rule: if I’m trying to win the moment, I’m not ready to decide.

2) Label it

I put one honest word on it:

Labeling turns a vague storm into something I can manage.

3) Test it

I ask four quick questions:

This is where I shift from hot take to considered action.

4) Choose the path

I pick the best option I can see, then I hold it with a light grip. In Stoicism, this is close to the reserve clause, I’ll do my best, and I accept that outcomes aren’t fully mine.

That mindset reduces panic. Panic creates sloppy choices.

Journaling for judgment under uncertainty

When I journal, I’m not writing a memoir. I’m building a thinking tool. The page is where I slow the film down and catch the frames I missed.

Donald Robertson lays out helpful historical roots and practical patterns in his piece on Stoic methods of journaling. I use a modern version that fits my path.

A simple journaling template

Situation (1 sentence): What happened, plain facts.
My first story: What I immediately told myself it “meant.”
What’s in my control: Actions, words, boundaries, attention.
What’s not: Other people’s reactions, the market, timing, the past.
Options (3): Three real paths, including “do nothing for now.”
Risks: What breaks if I’m wrong.
Virtue check: Which option shows wisdom, justice, courage, temperance?
Decision: What I’ll do next, and when I’ll re-check it.
One sentence to practice: A short reminder (calm, firm, kind).

10 prompts for better judgment when you’re not sure

  1. What am I treating as certain that’s only probable?
  2. What would change my mind, and what evidence would count?
  3. If I had to explain this choice in writing, what’s the clean argument?
  4. Which bias fits my mood right now (rush, fear, pride, anger)?
  5. Am I reacting to tone, or to content?
  6. What’s the smallest test that gives real feedback?
  7. What’s the second-order effect if this goes “right”?
  8. What’s my role in creating the problem, even a little?
  9. If I do nothing for 24 hours, what improves, what worsens?
  10. What choice lets me sleep at night without needing a long excuse?

If you want a work-focused example of journaling under strain, this essay on leaders using writing to lead through stress and uncertainty lines up well with the same idea: writing turns pressure into clarity.

How I build reflection into a team without slowing execution

Minimalist editorial illustration in stoic style depicting four professionals seated around a modern conference table, one sharing insights from an open journal while others listen attentively with notebooks. The scene conveys calm collaboration with muted neutral colors, soft natural light, and generous negative space.

Reflection gets a bad name because people picture long meetings and vague talk. I don’t run it that way. I treat reflection like brakes on a car: it doesn’t make you slower, it makes you able to go faster safely.

Here’s what works in real teams:

Decision notes, not decision theater: For big calls, I ask for a one-page note: goal, options, risks, and what we’ll measure. Writing exposes gaps fast.

Two-minute pause before commitment: Right before we lock a plan, everyone takes two minutes to write: Biggest risk I see, and One assumption we’re making. Then we share quickly.

Pre-mortem in 8 minutes: We pretend it failed. Each person names one reason. We don’t debate, we collect. Then we fix the top two.

After-action reviews that don’t shame: 15 minutes, three questions: What did we expect, what happened, what will we change next time?

Protected quiet: I block 15 minutes after high-stakes meetings so people can think before they message-react. Speedy replies can be a tax on quality.

This is Stoicism in a team setting: serious about action, serious about learning.

Conclusion

Fast takes feel good for a minute. Clear judgment pays off for years.

When I practice Stoicism, I pause, label what’s driving me, test the decision, and choose with steadiness. I use journaling to sharpen my thinking, then I bring reflection into the team in small, repeatable ways.

If you try one thing this week, try this: take your next heated decision and give it ten minutes on paper before you speak. You’ll feel the difference, and so will everyone who has to live with the outcome.