I use AI for almost all of my thinking now. Not to replace my thinking, but to mirror it back, test it, organize it, capture conversations, create summaries, and keep track of commitments. Almost all of my work passes through AI in some form. The more I use it, the more I realize prompting is not really about finding a magic phrase. It is more nuanced than that. For example, I used to ask AI to “summarize this.” Now, depending on the task, I might ask it to “sanitize this.” That sounds like a small difference, but the output changes. “Summarize” tends to compress what was said. “Sanitize” tends to remove the conversational clutter and preserve the actual intent, focus, and useful signal. That distinction matters. Human beings may treat many words as interchangeable. AI does not. The words we choose often change the direction of the machine’s “thinking.” So I am paying more attention to prompt language now, not as a fixed prompt-response formula, but as a way of steering the kind of work I want done. I do not have a cheat sheet. The right phrasing depends on the purpose. This is experimental. Try different words. Compare the results. Ask whether the output got sharper, flatter, broader, more useful, or less useful. There are no magic words. There is only a learned interaction between the person, the tool, and the work.