Maker Notes: A quiet difference between planning and postponing
Planning and postponing can look identical from the outside.
Both involve research. Both involve note-taking. Both involve collecting ideas and thinking things through. The difference isn’t in the activity — it’s in the posture.
Planning moves toward a decision.
Postponing circles it.
I’ve noticed that when makers are planning with intention, there’s usually a sense of narrowing. Options get crossed off. Tradeoffs are acknowledged. Something becomes less possible so something else can become more real.
Postponing does the opposite. It keeps options open “just in case.” It avoids closing doors. It delays the moment where something has to be chosen and lived with.
Neither posture is inherently bad. There are seasons where postponing is protective. But when postponing stretches too long, it starts to feel like being stuck — even though a lot of thinking is happening.
That’s often when people say they’re overwhelmed, or behind, or unsure why nothing feels settled.
Planning doesn’t always feel good. It requires deciding without perfect information. Postponing feels safer — until it doesn’t.
I don’t think the goal is to plan faster.
I think it’s to notice when thinking has stopped moving toward a decision — and gently ask why.
If you’re looking for a calmer way to understand where you are before making decisions, the Foundations path begins here.

