Decisions, Decisions
Decisions, Decisions I'm running errands. Nothing heroic. Nothing urgent. The kind of lazy Sunday afternoon where the mind wanders more than the car does. I’m driving without thinking much about driving—letting muscle memory do its thing—when I stop at a red light. Next to me, a Jeep Wrangler Rubicon idles patiently. What catches my eye isn’t the Jeep. It’s the lettering. RUBICON. All caps. Clean. Intentional. Rubicon. The river. Julius Caesar. History has a way of hiding in plain sight like that. A word stamped on the side of a vehicle. A moment that once separated before from after. According to the old accounts, once Caesar crossed that river, there was no undo button. The die was cast. No reverse. No casual re-routing. For Caesar, that was a big decision. Sometimes that's the thing about big decisions—we only recognize them as big when we’re safely past them. Most decisions in life aren’t like that. Most are small. Mundane. Practical. What to buy at the store. Whi...