Category: Decision-Making

  • Run the Right Race, Not the Rat Race

    Run the Right Race, Not the Rat Race

    A 1-minute reflection

    Every athlete who enters a race carries the desire to win.

    They may eventually receive gold, silver, bronze — or nothing at all. But no serious participant begins by saying, “I am not here to win.”

    Beyond the prize, recognition, and reward, there is something deeper.

    The inexplicable joy of knowing:

    “I gave myself fully to this.”

    Life is somewhat like that.

    Events keep coming. Races begin and end. Sometimes we win. Sometimes we lose. Sometimes we fall. Sometimes we have to start again.

    But one question remains:

    What is the gold medal we are all running after?

    Honestly, I do not fully know.

    Maybe nobody can define it for another person.

    But there is one quiet clue — the unexplained satisfaction we feel when we are doing something that feels aligned with who we are.

    That inner satisfaction is a guide.

    The problem is, many of us stop listening to it.

    The world pulls us away. Peers distract us. Society pushes us towards comparison, status, packages, and external validation.

    Even young people today often choose their subjects, careers, and futures based mainly on what “package” they may get — not necessarily on what they are naturally designed for.

    But can a sprinter win gold if he or she is unsure, distracted, or running someone else’s race?

    No.

    Each person has their own race to run.

    The purpose of life is not written in one common book.

    It is your journey.

    Your destination.

    Your decision.

    Human instinct is built to race.

    But wisdom lies in this:

    Run the right race.

    Not the rat race.

    Are you running your race, or someone else’s?

  • When Not Doing a Deal Is the Right Decision

    In shipping, there is often a natural excitement around a deal.

    A vessel becomes available.
    A buyer shows interest.
    A broker says there is movement.
    A number is mentioned.
    A window appears to open.

    At that moment, momentum can feel like opportunity.

    But not every opportunity deserves pursuit.

    Some opportunities deserve review.
    Some deserve patience.
    Some deserve more questions.
    And some deserve to be left alone.

    The Discipline to Pause

    One of the hardest things in maritime business is not always finding a deal. Sometimes, the harder thing is knowing when not to continue.

    This is especially true when time, emotion, competition, or incomplete information begins to influence decision-making.

    A vessel may look attractive on paper.
    A price may appear sensible at first glance.
    A market story may sound convincing.
    A counterparty may appear confident.

    But shipping decisions are rarely carried by one factor alone.

    A vessel is not only a price.
    It is condition, class, trading history, employment possibility, regulatory exposure, upcoming capital expenditure, documentation, authority chain, financing comfort, inspection reality, and commercial timing.

    When these layers are not clear, proceeding too quickly can convert excitement into exposure.

    The Hidden Cost of a Poorly Reviewed Deal

    A weak deal does not always reveal itself immediately.

    Sometimes the cost appears later.

    It may appear during inspection.
    It may appear during class review.
    It may appear during drydocking.
    It may appear when the vessel cannot be employed as expected.
    It may appear when documentation does not support the assumptions made earlier.
    It may appear when brokerage, authority, or mandate issues surface after momentum has already been created.

    By then, the buyer, seller, broker, or advisor may already be emotionally invested.

    That is why the early stage matters so much.

    The earlier a decision is reviewed, the easier it is to remain objective.

    Not Doing a Deal Is Also a Decision

    In maritime business, walking away is sometimes seen as a loss.

    I do not see it that way.

    Walking away from an unclear, unsupported, or badly structured deal can be a very strong commercial decision.

    It may protect capital.
    It may protect reputation.
    It may protect relationships.
    It may protect future optionality.
    It may prevent disputes that would have been avoidable with better review.

    Not doing a deal is not weakness.

    Sometimes, it is discipline.

    The Role of Independent Review

    Independent review is valuable because it slows the emotional pace of a transaction.

    It asks questions such as:

    • Is the commercial basis clear?
    • Is the vessel suitable for the intended purpose?
    • Are the valuation assumptions realistic?
    • Is the authority chain properly understood?
    • Are the technical risks visible?
    • Are upcoming costs being underestimated?
    • Is the deal being driven by evidence or excitement?
    • Is there enough clarity to proceed responsibly?

    These questions may not always stop a deal.

    Sometimes, they strengthen it.

    A well-reviewed deal becomes easier to defend, finance, negotiate, and execute. But a poorly reviewed deal often depends on optimism.

    Optimism has its place.

    But it should not replace judgement.

    Clarity Before Commitment

    This is why I keep returning to one simple principle:

    Clarity before commitment.

    Before a buyer commits, before a seller entertains unnecessary market noise, before a broker spends time pushing weak interest, and before a financier begins relying on incomplete assumptions, clarity must come first.

    Clarity does not mean certainty in every detail.

    Shipping will always carry uncertainty.

    But clarity means the main risks are visible, the assumptions are known, the authority chain is understood, the commercial case has been examined, and the decision is not being made blindly.

    The Quiet Strength of Saying No

    There is a quiet strength in saying:

    “Not yet.”
    “Not enough information.”
    “This does not fit.”
    “The risk is not justified.”
    “The chain is unclear.”
    “The timing is wrong.”
    “This should not be pursued.”

    These are not negative responses.

    They are responsible responses.

    A mature maritime decision is not measured only by the deals completed. It is also measured by the mistakes avoided.

    Final Reflection

    In shipping, many expensive outcomes begin long before the loss is visible.

    They begin in assumptions, shortcuts, unclear authority, weak review, poor documentation, emotional urgency, or misplaced confidence.

    That is why not doing a deal can sometimes be the right decision.

    Because the purpose of good judgement is not to chase every opportunity.

    It is to recognise which opportunities deserve commitment — and which ones deserve to be left behind.

  • Binders: Beliefs and Solutions

    From the Archives

    Originally written on 13 February 2019 on my earlier blog “Just felt like it!”. Refined and republished on 27 April 2026 for clarity and readability, while preserving the original thought and intent.

    Binders: Beliefs and Solutions

    In the literal sense, binders are clips or fasteners that keep a bunch of papers together and in order.

    There is usually a good reason for binding documents that are relevant to a particular issue, project, or subject. The contents are protected, organised, and kept together.

    But if we look at it differently, a binder can also represent a kind of imprisonment.

    Beliefs as Binders

    Likewise, when a group of people think alike and share a certain perspective, they tend to gather together in a uniform manner. Over time, they become bound by their own patterns.

    This can provide protection.

    It can also provide conviction.

    When people are surrounded by others who think like them, their own belief patterns get strengthened. They feel reassured that their way of seeing the world is correct.

    Perspective, Mindset, and Early Conditioning

    Perspective can also be called mindset.

    Mindset usually begins forming very early in a person’s life. Beliefs arise from convictions — some blind, some experienced, and some inherited from what we observe around us.

    The way we see our parents, relatives, teachers, fellow children, and the environment around us during our formative years shapes our perceptions. These perceptions slowly become beliefs. Those beliefs gradually form our mindset.

    Beliefs Shape the Path We Choose

    Beliefs and mindsets become the pillars on which we base our daily actions.

    They also influence the path we choose toward our goals.

    Just as there are many possible routes to reach a destination, there are also many belief patterns that can take us forward in life. We usually choose the route that conforms to our own mindset.

    But it must be remembered that some paths may be faster than others only because of where the signals, bridges, highways, and obstacles are placed.

    A shorter path does not always mean it is the best path.

    There may be more hurdles further down the road.

    Why Beliefs Need Reinforcement

    We go to temples, churches, mosques, and other places of worship based on our respective belief patterns.

    Why do we go again and again?

    Why do we repeat the same activities at these places week after week?

    Perhaps because such repetition reaffirms our beliefs and convictions.

    Beliefs need to be reinforced from time to time. If they are not reinforced, they may become unsettled and lead to confusion.

    Solutions and Mental Blocks

    Solutions to problems are often biased by individual beliefs.

    At times, we may be able to see the best way out of a situation, and yet we do not move in that direction because of a set pattern of mental blocks.

    In simple words, those mental blocks are also beliefs.

    Sometimes, the solution is visible.

    But our mindset does not allow us to accept it.

    Conflicts of Opinion

    Solutions to conflicts of opinion are among the most critical.

    In one way, such conflicts can sometimes be resolved by money, especially when need or necessity becomes stronger than belief patterns.

    But another way is through understanding.

    A solution may emerge when one person is able to gently convince the other person to look at a different perspective, even if only for a while.

    It is important to let the other person know:

    “I understand your belief. I respect where you are coming from. I am not trying to disturb your belief system. But for this particular situation, perhaps we can step aside from that belief for a moment and look at the practical solution.”

    This is difficult because it requires us to understand and feel the other person’s belief system.

    Why is the person behaving this way?

    What belief is driving that response?

    What fear, conviction, habit, or conditioning is behind that behaviour?

    When Beliefs Block Timely Action

    It is not that there are no solutions to many problems.

    Often, the solution exists.

    The difficulty is that we do not want to look in that direction. We do not want to endorse the proposed action or thought because it conflicts with something we strongly believe.

    We may say:

    “Even thinking in that direction is wrong.”

    “How can you do this to me? I am a pure vegetarian.”

    “No, I am not going to agree because this is not the correct way.”

    “I would have agreed if the same thing had been said in a nicer manner.”

    Are these not examples of how we avoid taking timely action?

    Instead of looking at the solution, we often get pulled back into what we strongly believe to be the correct way.

    Final Reflection

    Beliefs can protect us.

    They can give us identity, conviction, and direction.

    But they can also bind us.

    When beliefs become too rigid, they may prevent us from seeing solutions that are already available.

    Perhaps the real challenge is not to abandon our beliefs, but to become aware of them.

    To know when they are guiding us.

    And to know when they are quietly imprisoning us.