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The AI Advantage

119.4k members • Free

Mastery of Connection Feb 2026

2.2k members • Free

3 contributions to The AI Advantage
ChatGPT for the mind melt
I sat down after yesterday’s training with ChatGPT. Looking at launching my grief and life transition coaching practice but no idea where to start. I have a lot of my training information ready. This program helped me develop my pricing, marketing ideas and even my first graphic to post on Instagram.
ChatGPT for the mind melt
0 likes • 2h
@AI Advantage Team the pricing and messaging are 80% ready; need to touch up to sound more like me. Both of those things were holding me back. I already have most of the confidence needed to coach as I have facilitated a grief support group for six years.
0 likes • 2h
@Vicki Henshaw I think you will be very surprised. If you already have an outline and/or talking points dump those into a query
Quick pulse check today 👇
On a scale from 1–10… where are you with AI right now? 1 = ‘How do you spell ChatGPT again?’ 10 = ‘AI is working for me so well, it feels like leverage’ Drop your number 👇 (No judgment—just curious where everyone’s at today)
1 like • 2d
@Stacey Anderson three storylines 1–Serbian armor in 1500s 2-Russian Bratva AKA “Brotherhood” power structure 3-helped a friend find activities for their 10-day Amazon trip
1 like • 2d
Also have been using an AI tool to help brainstorm the storyline and some of the dialogue for a police procedural novel.
🧭 The Habits of People Who Never Feel Overwhelmed
People who rarely feel overwhelmed are not living quieter lives. They are living more intentional ones. They still have deadlines. They still have pressure. They still have a lot to do. The difference is they do not let everything compete for their attention at once. They have habits that protect their time, reduce friction, and stop small chaos from becoming full mental overload. That is the real advantage. They decide what matters early. Instead of carrying ten priorities in their head all day, they get clear fast. They know what actually needs to happen today, this week, and this month. That clarity cuts decision fatigue and keeps energy from leaking into things that do not move the needle. They do not treat everything as urgent. This is a big one. Overwhelmed people often react to whatever is loudest. Grounded people know that urgency is often manufactured by poor planning, unclear boundaries, or other people’s disorganization. They pause, assess, and respond with intention instead of panic. They build systems for repeatable things. They do not keep solving the same problem from scratch. They use routines, templates, checklists, calendars, and increasingly AI to reduce mental load. That means fewer loose ends, faster execution, and less time wasted rethinking what already has a process. They protect their attention. They know context switching is expensive. Constant notifications, random requests, and multitasking do not just waste time, they create mental clutter. So they guard focus. They batch tasks. They create quiet blocks. They make it harder for noise to hijack the day. They finish more than they start. A lot of overwhelm comes from open loops. Half-finished tasks. Unmade decisions. Unclear next steps. People who stay steady close loops quickly. They decide, delegate, delete, or do the next step. That creates momentum and keeps mental drag from building. They leave margin. This habit changes everything. They do not schedule every minute to the edge. They leave room for delays, recovery, and real life. That margin makes them look calm, but it is not luck. It is design. They understand that a packed calendar is often the fastest path to overwhelm.
0 likes • 13d
Learning/relearning my limitations during this first year of recovery after chemo. Making myself my first priority every day.
1-3 of 3
Cindy Donnell
2
14points to level up
@cindy-donnell-8379
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Active 1h ago
Joined Apr 6, 2026
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