From Lewis's article ...
This time he covered a lot
more ground and was willing to talk about the mundane details of presidential
existence. “You have to exercise,” he said, for instance. “Or at some point
you’ll just break down.” You also need to remove from your life the day-to-day
problems that absorb most people for meaningful parts of their day. “You’ll see
I wear only gray or blue suits,” he said. “I’m trying to pare down decisions. I
don’t want to make decisions about what I’m eating or wearing. Because I have
too many other decisions to make.” He mentioned research that shows the simple
act of making decisions degrades one’s ability to make further decisions. It’s
why shopping is so exhausting. “You need to focus your decision-making energy.
You need to routinize yourself. You can’t be going through the day distracted
by trivia.” The self-discipline he believes is required to do the job well
comes at a high price. “You can’t wander around,” he said. “It’s much harder to
be surprised. You don’t have those moments of serendipity. You don’t bump into
a friend in a restaurant you haven’t seen in years. The loss of anonymity and
the loss of surprise is an unnatural state. You adapt to it, but you don’t get
used to it—at least I don’t.”
*******
But if you happen to be
president just now, what you are faced with, mainly, is not a public-relations
problem but an endless string of decisions. Putting it the way George W. Bush
did sounded silly but he was right: the president is a decider. Many if not
most of his decisions are thrust upon the president, out of the blue, by events
beyond his control: oil spills, financial panics, pandemics, earthquakes,
fires, coups, invasions, underwear bombers, movie-theater shooters, and on and
on and on. They don’t order themselves neatly for his consideration but come in
waves, jumbled on top of each other. “Nothing comes to my desk that is
perfectly solvable,” Obama said at one point. “Otherwise, someone else would
have solved it. So you wind up dealing with probabilities. Any given decision
you make you’ll wind up with a 30 to 40 percent chance that it isn’t going to
work. You have to own that and feel comfortable with the way you made the
decision. You can’t be paralyzed by the fact that it might not work out.” On
top of all of this, after you have made your decision, you need to feign total
certainty about it. People being led do not want to think probabilistically.
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