Disliked{quote}what about the decisions that feel encoded and are not. not missing a stop because you forgot it. missing it because you were already in a state where the friction did not register the way it normally would. the map not being the territory cuts both ways. sometimes the territory changed and the map did not update yetIgnored
For example, in spite of playing for over a decade, professional basketball players still have a spell where they get called for traveling/carrying more frequently, or soccer players get more offside calls against them, etc.
W/O the conscious awareness, the same mistake is costing you over and over, yet daily offside/traveling drills are typically reserved for children. As Unconscious Competence starts to drift towards Conscious Competence, it warrants adjustments but again, given that it's largely ingrained, it is a speed bump, not a stop sign (unless the smaller intervention doesn't take).
I think the underlying concern has largely been studied and resolved via Flashcard/Spaced Repetition software. (I had my own VSA price action decks in Anki). The convo largely overlaps w/ getting a flashcard wrong not because you 'forgot', but moreso because of a temporary mental block or w/e else led to failure to retrieve.
The Anki solution is generally similar to what I'm suggesting: as memory/skill becomes more ingrained, that aspect doesn't need to be repeated daily, and, when there's a temporarily backslide, you should increase the frequency of repetition in the short-term w/o overly-discounting progress made. Hence, speed bumps before stop signs for previously ingrained ideas. Forgetting Curves overlaid w/ rates of Learning come to mind as a visualization representation.