I like to invoke Socrates at the beginning of all my presentations, regardless of content.  With my younger audeinces, very few even know of him, and with most of my audiences, initially, the Socratic Method flies right over their heads.
But I do it anyway because I want my audiences to make me to define my terms until they understand.

Dilemma essentially means two solutions, both can be right and both can be wrong.  Socrates defined it by describing how Plato came to him and asked to learn the law.  Socrates offered to teach him the law for 1000 pieces of silver,
but Plato(being a Philsopher) had no money.  So Socrates invented the student loan and told Plato he only had to pay it back if he won his first case.  After several months Plato decided that the law wasn’t for him and announced that he was leaving.  Socrates asked him to pay up and when he couldn’t Socrates took him to court.
The court ruled in Plato’s favor and said he did not have to pay.  Socrates was delighted, Plato had won his first case.

Last week, I was offered an opportunity to do a book signing and presentation in Scottsdale, AZ.  I was also contacted by some Hollywood types looking for some scripts.  My grandkids asked me when the next Rocky the Polar Bear episode would be published.  My day job is expecting a demonstration of the sophisticated application I have been working on.  I have been building a personal effort tracking system that is not quite done.  And I want to get back to weekly postings on my blog. All of these things require my attention and  all of these things are worthwhile activities   I call this the Multilemma.

Since all answers are right and all answers are wrong, it becomes very easy to rationalize doing nothing. 
To break free from this motivational paralysis, I have re-discovered the wisdom of incremental action.
If you just can’t decide what you are supposed to do this year, start with what feels right today.