Task paralysis often comes from switching costs—moving from rest to effort, from uncertainty to commitment, from thinking about the task to actually doing it—and this switch is harder for some neurodivergent brains. Pre-task priming uses AI to warm up your attention and intention before you start, reducing the activation energy required to begin.
Task paralysis triggers are the specific conditions, such as ambiguity, perceived perfectionism demands, unclear starting points, or emotional weight, that cause neurodivergent individuals to freeze before beginning a task even when they genuinely want to complete it.
AI can reduce paralysis by running a brief pre-task priming sequence that clarifies the first physical action, removes open-ended decisions, lowers the stakes through reframing, and creates a low-resistance on-ramp so the brain can move from freeze state into momentum without requiring willpower alone.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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