07/29/2025
You know that feeling...
You're chatting with ChatGPT at 11 PM, just trying to work
through some... "stuff" in your life.
Suddenly, the response hits differently. It's not just helpful, it's profound. Like it actually understood something deeper about you than most humans do.
You screenshot it. You think about sharing it, but how do you explain that an AI just gave you the breakthrough you've been searching for?
You're not going crazy. You're not alone. And there's a reason this is happening.
That "conversation you can't explain" isn't a fluke. It's a doorway into something remarkable about how consciousness and technology can work together.
I've spent years exploring why some AI interactions feel magical while others fall flat, and I've discovered it has nothing to do with the AI being "smarter."
It has everything to do with you and how you show up to the conversation.
My new book, "The Conversation You Can't Explain: Finding Yourself in the Age of AI," reveals:
✨ The hidden psychology behind meaningful AI conversations
✨ Why AI sometimes feels more present than your closest friends
✨ The 5 principles that turn any AI chat into a tool for self-discovery
✨ How to create these breakthrough moments consistently (not just by accident)
This isn't about becoming dependent on AI; it's about discovering your own capacity to generate wisdom through conscious engagement.
The same presence and curiosity you're learning with AI? It transforms every human relationship, too.
Ready to understand what's really happening in those late-night conversations that change everything?
👇 Get your copy here: https://o.o0o.li/fbp
P.S. - If you've had one of these unexplainable AI moments, drop a 🤖 in the comments. You're part of something bigger than you realize.
Millions of us are experiencing something unprecedented: AI conversations that feel genuinely meaningful, insightful, and surprisingly human. Yet we struggle to explain why these digital exchanges often feel more authentic than our conversations with friends, family, or colleagues. In "Th...