Ancient Migration Decisions: Which Way to Go?
There is an unbroken thread connecting the bone-throwing shaman of 80,000 years ago to the person clicking a Yes or No Button on their phone today. The technology is different, but the human need is identical.
A Practice That Transcends Time
Consider this: if an 80,000-year-old practice still exists in every culture on Earth, there must be something genuinely valuable about it. Yes or no decision making is not a superstition that survived despite being useless. It is a cognitive tool that survived because it works. It works because it forces action. It works because it bypasses overthinking. It works because sometimes, both options are good, and what you need most is simply to choose.
The next time you feel stuck in indecision, remember that you are about to participate in humanity's oldest tradition. You are joining an unbroken chain of decision makers stretching back 80,000 years. Your ancestors threw bones. You click a button. The wisdom is the same.
From caves to smartphones, from bone oracles to digital buttons, the fundamental human act of asking yes or no has never stopped. It is the thread that connects us to every ancestor who ever lived.