How I Outsmart Problems (Most Days) Using Mental Models
OK, so life is basically one long group project, right? There’s a mess to clean up, someone forgot the deadline, and nobody wants to take notes. Enter: mental models. These are like cheat codes for thinking – tiny frameworks that help me untangle big messes without turning into a Tasmanian devil. Here’s how I (try to) use them when life throws me a puzzle wrapped in chaos:
1. Circle of Competence
This one’s easy: know what you know, and more importantly, know what you absolutely do not know. Like, I know I can talk about feelings until we run out of chai, but I should not be trusted with your taxes or your IKEA furniture. In a team, this means playing to strengths. Let the spreadsheet whisperer handle the budgets, and let the people person handle the “we need to talk” conversations. Harmony > heroics.
2. Second-Order Thinking
Ah yes, the fine art of thinking past Tuesday. Before acting on a solution, I try to squint into the future like a desi mom reading fine print. What happens if this works? What happens if it works too well? Will I be stuck hosting the next five potlucks? Sometimes the first idea is a quick fix. The second-order thinking? That’s where wisdom hangs out.
3. Pareto Principle (aka The 80/20 Rule)
If 80% of my stress is coming from 20% of my problems (looking at you, inbox), then I know where to focus. I apply this everywhere, from parenting to project management to deciding which friends I should text back first. Hint: it’s the ones who don’t drain my soul. Fix the few big things, and the little ones often stop making noise.
4. Non-Zero-Sum Thinking
Not everything is a tug of war. Sometimes, the best outcome is when everyone walks away feeling like they got a hug and a cookie. I remind myself often: if I win but you feel small, did I actually win? Good solutions feel like open arms, not sharp elbows.
5. Empathy Mapping
This one’s my secret sauce. Before I rush in with my “fix it” hat, I pause and ask: What might this person be feeling right now? What are they afraid of? What’s their secret hope? Because people don’t always need solutions, they need to feel seen. And when they do feel seen? Magic. Softening. Real talk.
6. Eisenhower Matrix
Urgent vs. important: the eternal struggle. Some things feel like a five-alarm fire but are really just a burnt toast situation. I try to pause, breathe, and sort things out. If it’s urgent and important? Game on. If it’s neither? Into the “maybe never” pile it goes. I reserve my energy for what moves the needle and feels meaningful. (Which is basically how I decide who to let into my calendar and my heart.)

The Eisenhower Matrix – The Productivity Matrix
The Bottom Line?
Mental models don’t solve problems for you. But they do keep you from yelling “WHY IS THIS HAPPENING TO ME” into the void at 3am. They help you pause, zoom out, and approach life with just a little more grace, a little more clarity, and a lot less drama.
And honestly? That’s the real power move.

Train The Brain
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About The Article Author:
Hi, I’m Rachana. Its been my dream for years to do something to consciously create a better future where every one of us is excited about our own potential. My challenge to everyone is that they aspire for their personal best and leave a legacy of their work through their contributions to mankind.
One more thing. In December of 2044, I hope to win the Nobel.
Will you join me on this journey of growth and transformation?
Namasté.
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