Today I was working on a project in ChatGPT. As usual, I was kind of going off the rails from what I'd originally set out to do and it was pretty funny... ChatGPT actually put on the brakes mid-project and gave me this: "I think you've already identified the challenge.The danger isn't that this project isn't good.The danger is that it's too good and your brain immediately sees twenty businesses hiding inside it. That's happened repeatedly in your journey: - Chatbots became an agency. - The agency became courses. - The courses became frameworks. - The frameworks became communities. - The communities became brands. You naturally see systems. You don't just see a tree. You see the forest. And sometimes you see the lumber mill, the furniture factory, the trucking company, and the retail store all at the same time." 👀🧨 I had to laugh at that last line. But once I stopped laughing, I was honestly kind of amazed at how on-point and human that response was. I've told ChatGPT — in my custom instructions and in conversations — that I want structure and focus. If I go off course, it's supposed to nudge me back. This is the first time it's done it with this much personality. 🧐 So what do you think? Is ChatGPT getting more human-like in its responses? It is becoming more common for entrepreneurs to start one project and come up with five more along the way. The time between idea and execution is almost nothing now. That buffer we used to have, the one that let us actually finish one thing before the next shiny idea showed up? It's gone. We're all more susceptible to project overload than we used to be, whether we want to admit it or not. Don't lose focus. Use the tools to help with that. Set guardrails, custom instructions and build in automations and notifications that trigger resets.