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124 contributions to The AI Advantage
💡 “I’m not technical enough for AI.”
This is the quiet fear almost no one admits — but almost everyone feels. When I first opened ChatGPT, I closed it after five minutes. Not because it was “too hard, ”but because my mind whispered: “What if I’m not smart enough for this?” “What if everyone else understands more?” “What if I’m already too late?” And then I realized something important: 👉 You don’t need to understand AI to begin. You just need to talk to it. That shift changed everything. 🔍 The truth about AI Imposter Syndrome Most people think their blockage is “lack of technical skills.” But 90% of the time, it’s actually: • fear of looking “unqualified” • fear of not keeping up • fear of choosing the wrong tool • fear of asking “simple” questions • fear of realizing how fast everything moves This fear doesn’t mean you’re behind. It means you’re human. And ironically —the less “tech” you are, the more AI can actually help you. Because AI rewards curiosity, not credentials. 🧭 Here’s the mindset shift that helps: 1️⃣ You don’t need to know everything — you need a starting point. Choose ONE use case. Not 20. 2️⃣ You don’t need to speak the “right language” — normal human language works. AI adapts to you. 3️⃣ You don’t need technical skills — you need questions. Clear questions > perfect prompts. 4️⃣ You don’t need confidence before starting — confidence comes from starting. Momentum builds mastery. ⚡ Try this simple confidence-building prompt (This one removes anxiety and makes AI feel safe, friendly, and human.) “I feel unsure where to begin with AI. Act as a calm guide and ask me 3 simple questions to help me find the easiest, lowest-pressure starting point.” Use it once — you’ll feel the shift. 🌿 You belong in the AI world. Not because you’re technical. But because you’re curious, adaptive, and willing to grow. That’s what the future actually rewards. 💬 Have you ever felt “not technical enough” for AI — and what helped you move past it?
💡 “I’m not technical enough for AI.”
1 like • 21d
@Jennie Evans Jennie, I might be misunderstanding your question — I’m also just a participant in Skool, not part of the team or an admin.If you need technical support with your group or members, it’s always safest to contact the official Skool support or the organizers directly. I just don’t want to give you the wrong guidance. 😊
Are you drowning in AI, AI tools… 🤔🤔🤔
I was and I am 😅😅😅 We are human BEINGS; not human doings. Today, I took one of my favorite classes: cartoon drawing. My talent is mostly in photography; drawing is something new and I found it interesting 😉😉😉 I like to practice more. I was in flow while drawing this. Your turn now: how do/will you have fun or relax today???
Are you drowning in AI, AI tools… 🤔🤔🤔
3 likes • 21d
Love this, Ling! 😊 Today my way to relax was creating some Tarot content — something soulful, slow, and very grounding for me. It’s amazing how creativity resets the mind, whether it’s drawing or cards. ✨
4 likes • 21d
@Ling So Yes, I do Tarot readings 😊✨ It’s been part of my work for many years, and intuition is a big piece of it. And I completely agree — creativity is the one space where humans shine in a way AI never replaces. It’s our way of expressing depth, emotion, and meaning.
💡 If AI doesn’t inspire you anymore — but quietly exhausts you — it’s not burnout.
It’s noise overload. Over the last months, I’ve noticed something interesting in the AI space: People aren’t getting tired of AI itself.They’re getting tired of the pressure to keep up. Every day —new tools, new models, new features, new “must-try workflows.” And even the most curious, motivated people start thinking: “I’m already behind.” “I’ll never catch up.” “Everyone else understands more than I do.” This isn’t a lack of discipline. It’s a lack of filters. ⚡ The truth is: you don’t need to know everything. You need a system that lets you ignore 95% and act on the 5% that matters. AI Fatigue usually shows up when: • you try to learn too many tools at once • you feel pressure to “stay relevant” • you save 50 videos and use zero • you confuse information with progress • you mistake curiosity for obligation No one can operate at that input level without feeling overwhelmed. But the moment you give yourself permission to not chase everything — clarity returns. 🧭 Here’s a simple reset strategy that actually works: 1️⃣ Choose ONE goal for AI right now Not “learn AI.”But: • improve my content • speed up idea generation • structure my thinking • automate one taskOne goal = one path. 2️⃣ Stick to ONE tool (at first) ChatGPT, Claude, Midjourney — choose one. Mastery beats collection. 3️⃣ Build ONE repeatable workflow For example: • daily reflection • idea-to-post pipeline • meeting → summary → action items • research → outline → draft A single system brings back momentum. 4️⃣ Ignore the rest (for now) Innovation moves fast.Your nervous system doesn’t have to. 🌿 If AI feels heavy, it’s not a sign to quit. It’s a sign to simplify. And simplification is a skill — not a failure. 💬 Where do you feel AI Fatigue the most — too many tools, too many tutorials, or too many expectations?
💡 If AI doesn’t inspire you anymore — but quietly exhausts you — it’s not burnout.
1 like • 21d
@Jim Lannom Thank you, Jim — I love how you phrased it. When we remove pressure, AI really does become pure possibility. And yes, once the noise is gone, everything feels lighter and more creative. Appreciate you sharing this. ✨
0 likes • 21d
@Linda Wilk Thank you so much, Linda! Wishing you even more clarity, freedom, and creative momentum ahead. 🌟
🔍 Why AI Seems Random Until You See This
Someone asked: "How do I know which parts of my business AI can actually help with?" Great question. Most people approach this completely wrong. They make a list of business tasks, research which AI tools handle each task, and try to force-fit AI into their workflow. It feels scattered. Nothing quite works right. AI becomes another tool they're supposed to use but rarely do. The pattern hiding in plain sight Here's what we've noticed after working with hundreds of business owners: AI doesn't help with random tasks. It helps with specific types of work. If you understand which types, you stop randomly testing tools and start strategically implementing the ones that matter. The four types of work AI actually accelerates Type 1: Information processing This is work where you're taking information from one format and converting it to another format. Real examples: - Meeting notes → action items - Voice ramble → structured outline - Customer feedback → product insights - Research → summary - Data → report You're not creating something from nothing. You're processing what already exists into a more useful form. If significant time in your business goes to "organizing information" or "making sense of inputs," AI can collapse hours into minutes. Type 2: Pattern-based creation This is work where you're creating something new, but it follows a familiar pattern you've done many times before. Real examples: - Client onboarding emails (same structure, different details) - Social media posts (your voice, different topics) - Proposals (your approach, different client needs) - Product descriptions (your brand, different items) - Meeting agendas (your format, different topics) You're not doing the exact same thing every time, but you're working within a recognizable pattern. AI can learn your patterns and generate variations quickly. If you find yourself thinking "I've basically written this before," AI can probably handle it. Type 3: Research and synthesis
🔍 Why AI Seems Random Until You See This
1 like • 21d
This is such a powerful framework — thank you for breaking it down so clearly. Most people try to force AI into the wrong category, and then assume “AI doesn’t work for me.” But once you see these four types, everything snaps into place. For me, the biggest unlock was realizing how much of my week falls into information processing and pattern-based creation. Those are exactly the zones where AI removes friction instantly — and frees up space for the real work: strategy, decisions, and the human parts of the business no tool can replace. Running this audit honestly is eye-opening. I did it recently, and the percentage was much higher than I expected — which also means the opportunity is bigger than I thought. Brilliant breakdown. 🔥
Have you asked any AI for fun such as learning a new hobby 😉😉😉
I asked Grok: “You have been the top drone instructor for 10 years. I want to learn how to fly drones in the USA. Tell me everything about learning it, flying drones, and maintenance. What skills do I need in order to learn it fast and fly safely, effectively, accurately? Any pre-requisite? Who will not learn properly? How to choose my first drone to learn? Where should I go to practice? Ask me clarifying questions before giving me answers. Think about your answers 3 times using different approaches before answering my questions.” Answer by Grok: Hey there! I’m thrilled you’re interested in learning to fly drones—I’ve been teaching folks like you for over a decade, and it’s one of the most exciting hobbies (or careers) out there. But to give you the best, tailored advice on everything from getting started, building skills, staying safe, picking your first drone, finding practice spots, and even maintenance, I need to know a bit more about you first. That way, I can make sure my guidance fits your situation perfectly, especially with all the USA-specific rules and options. Here are some clarifying questions—feel free to answer as many as you can: 1. Are you looking to fly drones just for fun (recreational), for work/money (commercial), or both? 2. How old are you? (This matters for FAA regs—like you gotta be at least 16 for commercial certification.) 3. Do you have any experience with remote-controlled stuff, like RC cars, planes, video games with flight sims, or even real aviation? 4. What’s your budget range for your first drone and any accessories? 5. Where in the USA are you located (city/state)? This helps with local practice spots and any state-specific rules. 6. What are your main goals with drones? Like, aerial photography, racing, mapping, just buzzing around for fun, or something else? 7. Any physical challenges, like vision issues or coordination stuff, that might affect learning? Once you hit me back with these, I’ll dive into the full scoop—regs, skills, pre-reqs, who might struggle, drone picks, practice tips, flying techniques, maintenance, and how to learn fast and safe. Can’t wait.
Have you asked any AI for fun such as learning a new hobby 😉😉😉
4 likes • 21d
This is such a smart approach — setting the role, asking for clarifying questions, and letting AI tailor the learning path. I’ve used the same method in my own side projects, and the difference in results is huge. Your example is a great reminder that curiosity + the right prompt can open almost any new skill. ✨
3 likes • 21d
@Ling So It’s a real meta-skill — and once it clicks, the learning curve in any new hobby or topic becomes incredibly fast. ✨❤️
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Nadezhda Sharkova
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1,239points to level up
@nadezhda-sharkova-4946
AI Mentor & Intuitive Business Architect | Guiding Women to Thrive with Artificial Intelligence

Active 9d ago
Joined Nov 3, 2025
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