Question
How do I practice risk schema?
Quick Answer
Pick one decision you've been avoiding or delaying. Write down the risk as you currently perceive it — what could go wrong, how bad it would be, how likely it is. Now rewrite the same risk through three different lenses: (1) What is the cost of inaction — what happens if you do nothing for another.
The most direct way to practice risk schema is through a focused exercise: Pick one decision you've been avoiding or delaying. Write down the risk as you currently perceive it — what could go wrong, how bad it would be, how likely it is. Now rewrite the same risk through three different lenses: (1) What is the cost of inaction — what happens if you do nothing for another six months? (2) Is this decision reversible or irreversible — can you undo it if it goes wrong? (3) What is the asymmetry — is the upside capped or uncapped, and is the downside bounded or unbounded? Notice which lens changes your assessment most. That delta reveals the shape of your default risk schema.
Common pitfall: Reading about risk schemas intellectually and concluding that yours is already well-calibrated. The most dangerous risk schema is the one you have never examined. You will know you have examined yours when you can name at least three decisions where your risk model produced a suboptimal outcome — not in hindsight, but because the schema itself was structurally biased in a direction you can now articulate.
This practice connects to Phase 17 (Meta-Schemas) — building it as a repeatable habit compounds over time.
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