Do you have more freedom than ever - yet feel mentally exhausted?Do you delay decisions you care about, even when time is finally yours?Do open schedules, unlimited options, and constant flexibility leave you oddly restless instead of fulfilled?Modern life promised freedom.What it delivered was endless choice - and a mind that never rests.Chosen Constraints challenges the idea that more options lead to better lives. Drawing from cognitive science, neuroscience, and decision research, this book argues that the problem is not laziness, lack of discipline, or motivation - but a structural overload placed on the human brain.This book explores why: Procrastination is often a protective response, not a character flawDecision fatigue is structural, built into modern environmentsUnlimited flexibility fragments attention instead of freeing itThe brain needs limits to settle, focus, and sustain effortRather than offering productivity hacks or rigid systems, Chosen Constraints reframes limits as cognitive tools - mechanisms that reduce mental load, stabilize attention, and make freedom usable.Inside the book, you'll discover: Why decision-making is a biological and metabolic process, not a moral oneHow modern autonomy overwhelms the brain's predictive systemsWhy many productivity systems fail by adding control instead of removing decisionsHow self-chosen constraints differ fundamentally from imposed rulesWhy small, stable limits outperform habits, motivation, and willpowerHow structure supports focus without becoming rigid or authoritarianWhy different cognitive profiles require different kinds of limitsThis is not a guide to doing more. It is a framework for thinking less - where thinking is most costly.