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6 contributions to Get Grounded | Calm Marketing
What's in Get Grounded right now — and what's coming
Get Grounded has been live for a while, and it's doing the job it was built for: open the extension, check in your energy, do one marketing task, get told you showed up. Foggy days and fired-up days both count. This post is the current state of things — everything in the Free and Paid plans today — and the roadmap, so you can see where it's headed. A note on that roadmap: there are no dates on it, on purpose. Get Grounded gets built at a sustainable pace, the same way it asks you to work. These are the things being built next, roughly in the order they matter. If one of them is the thing you've been waiting for, say so in the comments. That's how it moves up the list. 𝗧𝗵𝗲 𝗙𝗿𝗲𝗲 𝗽𝗹𝗮𝗻 — 𝗶𝗻𝗰𝗹𝘂𝗱𝗲𝗱 𝘄𝗶𝘁𝗵 𝘆𝗼𝘂𝗿 𝗺𝗲𝗺𝗯𝗲𝗿𝘀𝗵𝗶𝗽 The daily loop - Energy check-in, foggy to fired up - One marketing task, matched to your business type and your energy - A built-in focus timer - Swap or skip the task if it isn't landing For the days that aren't normal days - "I can't today" — swaps in a gentle micro-task instead - "I did something else" — log a marketing win the app didn't hand you - A "you showed up today" screen, because showing up counts Seeing where you've been - A weekly dashboard with a day-by-day view - Today's task summary, front and center - A morning nudge on the extension badge Protecting your attention - Loop detection — nudges you off the analytics dashboards when you've been circling - Quiet mode — silence everything for one to seven days - Battery low mode — a stripped-down, minimal interface for low days - Dark and light mode 𝗙𝗿𝗲𝗲 𝗽𝗹𝗮𝗻 𝗿𝗼𝗮𝗱𝗺𝗮𝗽 Coming to Free, at no extra cost: - An onboarding tour — a quick walkthrough of the extension the first time you open it - Task category preferences — an "I never want ads tasks" filter, so the app stops handing you work you won't do - Weekend mode — lighter tasks, or an auto-skip, on Saturdays and Sundays - Custom business type — describe your own, instead of picking from the six presets - Daily quote sharing — copy the day's quote to your clipboard for a quick social post
0 likes • 26d
@Dana Sacco
0 likes • 18d
@Dana Sacco No, it's still not. I'm wondering if it's because my skool email and my google profile email are different.
The Chrome Extension is Up and Available to Download!
https://chromewebstore.google.com/detail/cifcjlnhmgcebjcejlimjbklbndjadhg?utm_source=item-share-cb
The Chrome Extension is Up and Available to Download!
0 likes • 28d
I upgraded, but the chrome extension isn't recognizing that. I uninstalled and reinstalled, but no luck. Any suggestions?
0 likes • 27d
@Dana Sacco Thank you!
AI Prompts for Writing Sales Content That Doesn't Sound Salesy
Sales copy written by AI out of the box tends to sound like a parody of a sales page. Urgency language, benefit bullets, calls to action every other paragraph. 💡 But AI is actually useful for sales writing if you give it the right constraints. The key is telling it explicitly what not to do. Here are 5 prompts built for the kind of selling that fits this community: When you need to write a sales email for an offer: "Write a sales email for [describe your offer in one sentence]. The reader is a realistic entrepreneur who is skeptical of hype and tired of being sold to. Do not use urgency or scarcity. Do not use the words 'transform,' 'game-changer,' 'invest,' or 'journey.' Explain what it is, who it's actually for, what they'll be able to do after, and how to buy it. Keep it under 350 words." When you need to write a social post about an offer without it feeling like an ad: "I want to write a social post that mentions [offer] without it feeling like a pitch. Help me write something that leads with a real insight or honest observation about [topic your offer solves], then mentions the offer naturally at the end as an option for people who want to go deeper. No call-to-action language. No 'link in bio' at the start." When you need to explain your pricing without apologizing for it: "I charge [price] for [offer]. Help me write 3 sentences that explain the value of this without using the word 'investment,' without comparing it to a cup of coffee, and without over-justifying it. Just plain, honest framing of what they get and what it costs." When you want to follow up with someone who expressed interest but didn't buy: "Write a follow-up message to someone who showed interest in [offer] but didn't purchase. Don't create artificial urgency. Don't guilt them. Just check in honestly, offer to answer questions, and make it easy to say no if it's not the right time. Keep it under 100 words." When you need a FAQ that doesn't feel defensive: "Here are the most common questions I get about [offer]: [list them]. Write honest answers to each one. Don't over-explain or get defensive. If the answer is 'it depends,' say that and explain what it depends on."
AI Prompts for Writing Sales Content That Doesn't Sound Salesy
0 likes • 29d
Definitely the sales one. Though I did start reading The Toilet Paper Entrepreneur after you mentioned it, and wow it was eye opening. I'm revamping everything.
The Reason Your Content Feels Hard Has Nothing to Do With Discipline
Can we talk about why content creation is actually exhausting for a lot of us in here? It’s not laziness. It’s not inconsistency. It’s not that you don’t have anything to say. It’s that the way content creation gets taught was designed for a very specific type of brain — one that finds repetitive systems energizing, can context-switch without a recovery period, and doesn’t lose the thread when life interrupts the schedule. That’s not most of us. For neurodivergent brains, the standard content advice creates a specific kind of exhaustion: Post every day → decision fatigue every single day Batch your content → requires a 4-hour focus block most of us can’t reliably access Show up consistently → but consistency looks different when your energy isn’t linear Just repurpose! → still requires you to sit down and do the thing The advice isn’t wrong exactly. The framework is just built for someone else. This week we’re going to talk about what actually works when your brain doesn’t run on linear energy, predictable focus windows, or the ability to perform enthusiasm on command. We’re talking about voice-first workflows so you’re not staring at a blank screen. Batching that works in 20 minutes, not 4 hours. Repurposing systems that mean one piece of content does five jobs. And knowing which platforms actually fit how your brain works — so you stop trying to be everywhere. No discipline required. Just a different approach. Before we start — what’s the part of content creation that costs you the most energy right now? 👇
1 like • 29d
Brain fog and exhaustion. I'm too tired and too foggy to come up with ideas. When I do, I list them, but then I'm too tired to make graphics, etc.
Monday / Stop Starting From Scratch Every Single Time
If content creation feels exhausting, there’s a good chance it’s because you’re doing the hardest part over and over again. Starting from nothing. Blank screen. Blinking cursor. “What do I even say today.” That moment right there is where most of the energy goes — not in the writing, not in the posting, not in the strategy. In the starting. And for a lot of neurodivergent brains, starting is genuinely the hardest cognitive task there is. It’s not a character flaw. It’s how we’re wired. The brain resists initiation even when we know what we want to say. Even when we care about the topic. Even when we’ve done it a hundred times before. So the fix isn’t to get better at starting. It’s to stop having to start. This is what batching actually means — not a four-hour content marathon on a Sunday afternoon. It means that when you do have words, you capture more than you need right now. When you have a thought that lands, you pull two more out of it before you close the tab. When you write one thing that works, you ask yourself what else lives next to it. You’re not creating content. You’re building a pile. And then on the days when the brain won’t start? You’re not starting. You’re just picking something from the pile. This week’s minimum viable action: Next time you post something — anything — write down two more ideas that live right next to it before you close the app. Don’t write the posts. Just the ideas. Two sentences each. Somewhere you’ll actually find them again. That’s it. That’s the whole thing. What’s your current system for capturing ideas when they show up — or do they just disappear into the void? Tell me below. 👇
Monday / Stop Starting From Scratch Every Single Time
0 likes • 29d
I was using Notes and Upnotes and still do for a lot of things, but I created an app and it has some tools for my business things.
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C.j. Nix
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1point to level up
@cj-nix-2862
writer, poet, wife, mom

Active 5h ago
Joined May 27, 2026
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