Link December 2018 dec 2018 final2 | Page 44

COMPETENCE EVENTS TECHNOLOGY you use your values as a compass, the decisions become easy. My value of courage gave me the strength to look at my fears in the eyes, love made me think of prioritizing the ones I have over the ones yet to come and integrity gave me the confidence to do the right thing based on the best available data. I did not consider the fact that the twins will be unique or that they were boys and we already had a girl. 2. Ask power questions. The next step was to prepare a list of questions that will enable me to gather the right information to assist in decision making. The questions included: What are the alternatives available? What is the best solution that protects my wife and assures healthy baby/ies? What is the probability of its success? What are the learning’s from similar cases in the past? What are the opinions of top 3 doctors in the city? What is my wife’s decision preference? What are the risks? What are the trade-off’s? 3. Knowledge gathering. In the following days we met a number of doctors in various hospitals of Brussels and neighboring towns, and tried to gather as much data as possible about other similar cases and sought the answers to my power questions. The opinions and perspectives were helping to bring about more clarity, in my mind for making the decision. 4. Manage emotions. This is the 44 | December 2018 most challenging part of taking any objective decision. Managing emotions to keep a calm mind is most difficult. It is very easy to fall prey to the trap of emotional biases and make a decision that you regret for the rest of your life. We tried to be as objective as possible and did not allow thoughts of having twins or boys convolute our thinking. Rather, we focused on the doctors advice and evaluated the risk in each situation and considered it as a critical part of the decision. 5. Recognize uncertainty. Every decision has a trade-off and a risk attached to it. However, at some point you simply have to decide, knowing well the consequences and the possibility that things might not go as well as, planned. My wife and I spoke about the risks, the uncertainty and the trade-offs. They were scary but we agreed to face them if the situation arrives. 6. Be decisive. Indecision is the worst decision. Procrastination is a bane. We decided to go for the selective abortion and keep the single baby girl, as the chances of her survival and being healthy was the highest. Post the selective abortion we were now waiting for the outcome of our decision. We were praying for a healthy baby and took best care of Tabi. Interestingly, the original delivery date of the baby was January 1, 2000. She was to be a millennial baby. However, she decided to come on December 27, 1999. I was ecstatic to lift this little