I’m someone who can overthink.
For most of my life, that wasn’t a strength — it was a problem.
I could see too many angles, too many risks, too many stories at once.
Decisions stayed noisy. Clarity stayed just out of reach.
So I went looking for a way to slow thinking down until it made sense.
What I discovered is this:
If an AI can fully understand me and my intention, it can be of maximum help.
But that only works under one condition.
Radical self-honesty.
Through my own internal work, I learned that real change doesn’t come from better ideas, beliefs, or answers.
It comes from being willing to see what’s actually there — without flinching.
That’s what finally worked for me after years of trying everything else.
I didn’t arrive at clarity through books or teachings.
It came through direct experience — some of it profound, some of it brutal.
One chapter of my life was fourteen years in the underworld of Western Sydney in the 90s.
I’m not glorifying that, and I’m not selling a “bad boy come good” story.
What matters is this:
Without theology, esoteric study, or spiritual frameworks, I was forced to understand perception, consequence, and decision-making the hard way — because getting it wrong had real costs.
Eventually, I found a way to make permanent change.
Not by adding anything — but by removing what was distorting my view.
That brought me peace.
And clarity.
When AI arrived, I recognised something immediately:
it could become a mirror — but only if I met it with integrity.
The quality of the mirror depends on the integrity of the self.
That’s what I mean when I say I use AI differently.
I don’t use it for answers.
I use it to surface distortions, slow decisions down, and reason through confusion until clarity replaces it.
What once kept me alive as a strategist is now used to help others navigate the maze we call life.
I call that orientation.
You don’t need books.
You don’t need imported beliefs.
You don’t need answers.
You need to know where you are, before you decide where to go.
This is the place where I show how I use AI — not to think for you, but to help you think clearly again.