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For six months, I let AI plan my week. It was efficient, it was optimized, and it was completely wrong for me.
I thought planning was about the output—getting organized faster so I could move on to "real work." But after six months of AI-generated weekly previews, I realized I wasn't actually more focused. I was more efficient, but I was disconnected from what I actually needed to be focused on.
The breakthrough came when I remembered this quote from Andre Norton: "I think the human race made a big mistake at the beginning of the Industrial Revolution. We leaped for the mechanical things. People need to use their hands to feel creative."
WHAT YOU'LL LEARN:
THE KEY INSIGHT: The act of writing IS the planning. It's not just about the output. The physical motion of writing connects to a part of our brains that AI cannot connect to. It gives us deeper connection to what we're working on and creates the mental commitment we need to actually follow through.
As I discovered: when you skip the thinking process, you skip the clarity process. Sometimes the inefficient process has value because it forces you to engage with your priorities mentally, not just organizationally.
THE 80-20 RULE FOR AI:
87% of creators use AI daily, but creative agencies are cautious about over-automation—and I think rightly so. The clarity you need doesn't come from faster organization. It comes from the act of processing, prioritizing, and committing yourself.
Don't overlook the value of mental clarity that doing things with your hands can bring.
FEATURED RESOURCE: Download the Future You Framework and other planning templates at https://dustinpead.com/free
If you're finding that balance between AI and human work, I'd love to hear from you: [email protected]
CONNECT:
Website: https://dustinpead.com
Instagram: @dustinpead
#AIProductivity #WeeklyPlanning #CreativeProcess #AnalogPlanning
By Dustin PeadFor six months, I let AI plan my week. It was efficient, it was optimized, and it was completely wrong for me.
I thought planning was about the output—getting organized faster so I could move on to "real work." But after six months of AI-generated weekly previews, I realized I wasn't actually more focused. I was more efficient, but I was disconnected from what I actually needed to be focused on.
The breakthrough came when I remembered this quote from Andre Norton: "I think the human race made a big mistake at the beginning of the Industrial Revolution. We leaped for the mechanical things. People need to use their hands to feel creative."
WHAT YOU'LL LEARN:
THE KEY INSIGHT: The act of writing IS the planning. It's not just about the output. The physical motion of writing connects to a part of our brains that AI cannot connect to. It gives us deeper connection to what we're working on and creates the mental commitment we need to actually follow through.
As I discovered: when you skip the thinking process, you skip the clarity process. Sometimes the inefficient process has value because it forces you to engage with your priorities mentally, not just organizationally.
THE 80-20 RULE FOR AI:
87% of creators use AI daily, but creative agencies are cautious about over-automation—and I think rightly so. The clarity you need doesn't come from faster organization. It comes from the act of processing, prioritizing, and committing yourself.
Don't overlook the value of mental clarity that doing things with your hands can bring.
FEATURED RESOURCE: Download the Future You Framework and other planning templates at https://dustinpead.com/free
If you're finding that balance between AI and human work, I'd love to hear from you: [email protected]
CONNECT:
Website: https://dustinpead.com
Instagram: @dustinpead
#AIProductivity #WeeklyPlanning #CreativeProcess #AnalogPlanning