Write down your mood and expectation before high-stakes events — make filters visible
Before high-stakes observations (meetings, decisions, analyses), write down your current mood and strongest expectation about the outcome to make perceptual filters visible for later comparison against actual observations.
Why This Is a Rule
Your mood and expectations are perceptual filters that shape what you observe — and they operate invisibly. An anxious mood before a meeting makes you notice threats and overlook positive signals. An expectation that "this project is failing" makes you weight negative data and discount positive data. The filters are active during observation but invisible from within the observation.
Writing down your mood and strongest expectation before the event makes these filters external and inspectable. After the event, you can compare: "I expected the client to be hostile, and I noticed hostility. But was the client actually hostile, or did my expectation color my perception?" Without the pre-event record, you can't ask this question — your expectation and your observation are fused, and hindsight prevents you from remembering what you expected before you saw what happened.
This is the same logic as pre-registering a study hypothesis before seeing the data: it prevents your interpretation from being shaped by the outcome.
When This Fires
- Before important meetings where your assessment will inform decisions
- Before reviewing performance data, financials, or metrics
- Before making high-stakes observations of team dynamics or system behavior
- Any event where your mood or expectations could bias what you notice
Common Failure Mode
Writing a vague expectation: "I expect it to go fine." This is too general to serve as a comparison anchor. Specific expectations produce useful comparisons: "I expect the client to push back on the timeline and the team lead to agree too quickly." After the meeting, you can check: did that happen, or did your expectation create an illusion of it happening?
The Protocol
Before any high-stakes observation: (1) Write two lines: "Current mood: [word]" and "Strongest expectation: [specific prediction]." (2) Conduct the observation/meeting. (3) Afterward, write your observations separately before re-reading the pre-event notes. (4) Compare: did your observations align with your expectations? If so, did the alignment come from reality matching prediction, or from the prediction filtering your perception? The cases where expectation and observation diverge are the most informative — they reveal either genuine surprise or successful filter correction.