I often think that we each only have the capacity to answer so many questions in one day. Maybe that number is fifty. Maybe it’s more like a split: a bunch of easy questions, a smaller handful of medium ones, and only a few hard ones before we’re tapped out. However you slice it, the idea is the same: if we can reduce the number of unnecessary questions we’re forced to answer, the day gets lighter, smoother, and easier.
That’s where the Uniform Effect comes in. It’s not about wearing the same exact thing every day just for the sake of it. It’s about stripping away the trivial decisions so you can save your energy for the ones that matter. For me, that means having a default work outfit. I’ve found that Lululemon pants, despite being a little pricey and maybe not quite as good as they used to be, are perfect for the office. They look like dress pants but feel like sweatpants. Pair them with a Callaway golf polo and I’m good to go. No rummaging through the closet. No standing in front of a drawer debating colors. I know what I’m going to wear before I even think about it.
The same goes for the gym. I found this random Amazon brand of workout shorts that ended up being surprisingly great. I bought six pairs. Now I don’t waste time figuring out what to wear. I throw on the shorts, a shirt I like (still determining what is the perfect one), and I’m ready. The only decision left is whether or not to work out, which is the only real decision anyway.
The beauty of the Uniform Effect is that it compounds. Every small decision you don’t have to make frees up just a little bit more mental space. By the time the important questions roll around, from work projects, family matters, life choices, you’ll find that you still have the energy to enthusiastically answer them. You’ve given yourself a head start. And when the tough questions come, you’ll be glad you saved your energy for them.
The same principle applies when eating out. Restaurants with just a handful of menu items often serve them with remarkable consistency. Compare that to the Cheesecake Factory approach, with dozens of pages and hundreds of choices, where being a jack of all trades usually means being the master of none. Places like Chipotle, with their straightforward string of binary options such as chicken or steak, black beans or pinto, actually make the decision process smoother while still leaving room for personal preference. You spend less energy on decision making, and more time enjoying your choices.
This all comes from the power of the Uniform Effect. This framework works because it trims the noise, leaving you with a cleaner runway to focus on what’s worth your attention. Fewer pointless questions means more clarity, more energy, and ultimately more space for the decisions that matter most. Take it upon yourself to see what simple or medium choices you can eliminate from your life. You might be surprised by what room it opens up to answer the more difficult questions.