With all the plans and timetable clash together, one starts panicking, urging the president to give him the answer and so he knows what to do next. A friend reminded him though, asking, "Do you want to go? If you seriously do, why would you want to know whether the meeting is on? It's either you go, or you don't." Something new indeed, or probably not. Why? We may ask ourselves. To feel better? Walking down the Petaling street without a sense of guilt, knowing there is no meeting? What if it's the other way round, there is one? It would be harder to decide, wouldn't it? But why is that we want to know more? When we ourselves know what we wanted the most? Does it really help sometimes? Personally, the information we get might be useful, might be not, depending on the situations really. One once mentioned, too many options may not help in making decisions, but we usually take it into account, question comes first and answer later. Whichever ways possible, we tend to forget what the most important factor is, the manipulative skill needed in the first place. Thus, reminders should be given from time to time, which would smack us right at the back of our head, giving us a clearer mind.