How AI Helps Writers Notice When Their Body Stops Rushing
A prompt for authors who want to explore how their nervous systems shape their work.
Most writers carry tension they no longer notice. The pressure to deliver, revise, promote, and remain visible keeps the body alert long after the task ends. Over time that state feels normal. Attention narrows. Decisions speed up. Writing shifts into a task governed by control and output, and the sense of presence drains away.
When writers talk about AI, the focus usually turns to skill or efficiency. A more basic question is often left untouched: what state is your body in when you sit down to write? Physical tension narrows choice and expression. Bodily ease opens space for different decisions and ideas.
This week’s Slow AI prompt explores that moment of settling. It is written in collaboration with Jessica Drapluk, a family nurse practitioner and the writer of NP Fellow, a weekly publication about nervous system healing, emotional resilience, and the practical science of slowing down enough to feel safe in your own body again.
In this post we will:
Offer a way to notice the link between bodily safety and clarity in writing.
Use a prompt that focuses on the cues of slowing.
Invite a wider conversation about pace in writing communities.
Ethical practice begins in the conditions from which we create. Calm attention leads to honesty in process and honesty in output.
Step-by-step
Try this prompt with your AI tool of choice:
I want to understand how my body signals safety. Read the short text I provide and give me a list of five specific cues that show my nervous system is slowing. Do not rewrite or improve my text. Only identify the cues and describe what each one tells you about my state.
Choose an AI model that does not train on your data. Disable memory, personalisation, and history if those settings are available. Do not upload anything you would not be comfortable losing control over.
Keep the sample short. One paragraph is sufficient. Write about a specific moment when you noticed something inside you begin to settle. Stay with direct sensation or thought. Avoid explanation, metaphor, or analysis.
Read the response critically. Note which cues the tool identifies and which it misses. Pay attention to any sensations it flattens, generalises, or reframes in language that does not fit your experience.
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A moment from Jessica Drapluk
When I tried the prompt, the first thing I noticed was how quickly my mind moves when I write. Ideas come in fast, and I feel an urgency to capture everything before it slips away. That pace has become so normal to me that I rarely question it. It feels like protection, if I move fast enough, I won’t lose the thought.
Slowing down changed the experience.
It reminded me that writing has always been therapeutic for me, not transactional. Most of what I write begins as advice to myself, and I forget that when I’m rushing. When the process became quieter, I could actually feel the enjoyment again, the part of me that loves shaping ideas, not just producing them.
AI helps when it meets me where I am: not speeding me up, but helping me breathe, think, and create with more clarity. When the process feels lighter, I show up with more enthusiasm and purpose instead of pressure.
The reflection also made something else clear: my sense of security doesn’t come from a job structure. It comes from my ability to write well, adapt quickly, and create my own income from home while being with my wife and family. That’s the life that feels grounding to me.
Seeing myself through that lens, as someone capable, adaptable, and creatively self-sufficient, made the future feel less like something to brace for and more like something I’m already shaping.
For a selection of free resources to help slow down and reflect with AI visit The Slow AI Library.
What to do with it
If you want to share:
Describe one cue that surprised you once it was named.
Note any part of the response that did not feel true and how you corrected that understanding.
If you tried this with a group, observe how the tone shifted when people described bodily experience rather than technique.
The purpose is to draw attention to the conditions that shape writing before words appear on the page.
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There is no cost involved.
Just a way to help build and grow our communities collaboratively.
Why this matters
Writers often look for clarity in tools or techniques. They rarely look at the state from which they create. A tense system limits range. A calm system expands it. Many writers have never been taught to recognise this difference.
Prompts like this make the internal landscape visible. They invite writers to see which sensations open their thinking and which close it. They offer a way to bring attention back into the body at a time when many feel stretched thin.
A tool cannot decide what counts as authentic writing. It can, however, reveal signs you may have ignored and show you how your nervous system shapes the way you meet the page.
If you want to explore more of Jessica Drapluk’s work, you can visit NP Fellow, a best-selling Substack publication for high-achieving professionals who want to strengthen their minds, restore clarity, and prevent burnout.
From How Can You Use AI to Speak Truths to a Child?
Gem💎 The Natural Learning Path and I have been struck by how quickly the conversation moved beyond tools and into responsibility.
James reframed clarity as something co-created rather than delivered. His five voices lens reminded us that explanation is never neutral. When this is understood, difficult subjects become bearable rather than overwhelming.
Laura Ferraz Baick sharpened the focus further by naming the discipline required to separate our own conditioned responses from what a child actually needs. Her point cuts to the centre of the prompt. The work is not simplification. It is restraint.
Rick Guetter offered a necessary ethical anchor. Children can carry child-sized emotional loads. Protecting them does not mean withholding truth. It means attending to how that truth is shaped and why.
Taken together, these reflections point to a shared insight. Using AI well in sensitive contexts begins before prompting. It begins with noticing our own stance, our pace, and the fears we might otherwise pass on. Slowing down functions as a form of care within responsible practice.
Let’s Collaborate
If you enjoy Slow AI and would like to create something together, I would love to collaborate. To find out how, click here.
If you try this week’s prompt, Jessica Drapluk and I would love to hear how you have used this prompt to find out how your own body signals safety when writing.
We read and respond to all your comments.
Go slow.








