
What Would a Starfleet Captain Do?
Decision-making doesn’t always come naturally to me. I’m someone who likes options—all the options—and who tends to weigh each one like it’s the fate of the universe. (Which, to be fair, it sometimes feels like.) So I’ve developed a personal tool to help. It’s not a spreadsheet or a decision matrix. It’s geeky metaphors.
Over the years, I’ve learned to treat my inner voice like a sci-fi scanner or a superhero signal. When I tune into that system, I can tell whether something is a green light, a red alert, or a confusing anomaly that needs more analysis.
Super Signals and Sci-Fi Scanners
Let me explain with some of the metaphors I actually use in my day-to-day life:
- The Bat-Signal Test: If I get an idea and it feels like the Bat-Signal just lit up the sky, I know I need to pay attention. It doesn’t mean I have to act right away, but it does mean something in me is calling out for a response. It’s a sign that this idea is personal, meaningful, or urgent to some deeper part of me.
- The Spidey-Sense Check: On the flip side, if my stomach tightens or I get a weird sense of danger that I can’t explain, I treat it like Spider-Man’s spidey-sense. Maybe it’s fear, maybe it’s intuition—but either way, I slow down and investigate before I leap into anything.
- The Starfleet Scan: When I’m feeling overwhelmed, I try to scan the situation like I’m running a tricorder over it. I ask questions: What’s really going on here? What’s under the surface? What does this feeling mean?
Interpreting the Signals
What’s important is that these metaphors give me something concrete to work with when my emotions are fuzzy. I’ve learned not to judge myself for needing extra tools to process decisions. I actually think it’s kind of a superpower. I just had to build the right toolkit—and mine happens to come from fandom.
Sometimes my Bat-Signal is wrong. Sometimes my tricorder malfunctions. But just like any hero-in-training, I’ve learned to adapt. What matters is that I keep listening, even when the signals are faint.
Diana’s Corner: The Real Signal Cat
My cat Diana is the opposite of indecisive. When she wants food, she makes it known. When she’s happy, she purrs like a warp core. She doesn’t overthink, she just knows.
Watching her has helped me realize that some decisions don’t need analysis—they just need presence. If the sunbeam feels good, stretch into it. If it doesn’t, walk away. She’s a Jedi in a cat’s body.
Final Thought: Tune In to Your Own Signal
Whether you’re a fellow geek or not, the idea here is simple: you can invent your own signal system. Borrow from books, movies, video games, or anything else that helps you better understand yourself.
Life throws a lot at us—but with the right internal compass (or superhero metaphor), you can find your direction.
Have you ever relied on ‘gut feelings’ or geeky metaphors to steer your choices? Share your favourite mental tool!