Judgment calls are judgment calls. They aren’t exact. They aren’t easy. They don’t guarantee a successful outcome.
What the leader can know is that doing nothing is also a judgment call. Failure to exercise judgment is still a choice of what to do with one’s judgment.
What the leader can learn is that it is better to follow through with judgment and action, alongside helpful perspective from people who truly care about them, than it is to abdicate or hide or be paralyzed by fear.
Other leaders must manage far bigger potatoes than I. Other leaders have far more naysayers and angry voices around them than I have ever faced. Imagine being a presidential candidate, a professional baseball team manager, an airline executive, or a planning commission chair in your local township, and having to exercise judgment in public view. Or imagine being God, and having everyone blaming or praising based on their perception of your divine judgment.
Actually, it strikes me that baseball managers and God have a lot in common. Everyone second guesses them. Most fans care about the game they attend without respect for managing for the season, just as many people speak to God only about their own selfish situations and without respect for their lifetime or for the welfare of Creation.