What to Ask AI When You’re Too Tired to Think

There are days when your brain just isn’t there. You open your laptop. You look at your work.

And nothing clicks (I’m talking about your brain, not your mouse).

You know what needs to get done. You just can’t figure out where to start.

So you open AI, hoping it will help.

And then…

You stare at the input box. Even figuring out what to ask feels like too much.

The Real Problem Isn’t the Work

When your energy is low, the problem isn’t your to-do list. It’s your ability to think through it.

Prioritizing feels harder.
Decisions feel heavier.
Even simple tasks feel unclear.

Your mental capacity drops, but your workload doesn’t.

That gap is where most people get stuck.

Why AI Often Makes This Worse

AI is supposed to help you think, but when you’re already mentally drained, it often does the opposite.

You typically ask something broad like: “Help me plan my day”

And get back in response:

  • multiple categories
  • structured timelines
  • several “good options”
  • lots of emogies

Now you’re not just tired. You’re annoyed and responsible for sorting through all of it.

That’s the trap.

When your energy is low, you don’t need help thinking more. You need help thinking less.

What Actually Works When You’re Drained

When your brain is tired, AI should not expand your decision-making.

It should reduce it.

That means your prompts need to do three things:

  • limit decisions
  • reduce output
  • force a clear next step

If your prompt doesn’t do that, it will likely make things worse.

5 Prompts to Use When You Can’t Think Clearly

You don’t need to come up with the “perfect” prompt. You need something simple that works when your thinking is off.

Start here.

1. Overwhelm Reset

Use when everything feels urgent.

“I feel overwhelmed and can’t think clearly.
Here is everything I need to do:
[Paste list]

Reduce this into:
• one priority
• two optional tasks
• what can wait

Keep it simple.”

2. Low Energy Plan

Use when you’re drained but still need to function.

“I have very low energy today but still need to get through my work.
Here is what I need to do:
[Paste list]

Help me create a minimal version of today that focuses only on what matters.”

3. One Next Step

Use when you’re stuck.

“I can’t figure out where to start.
Here is what I’m trying to do:
[Explain briefly]

Give me one clear next step.”

4. Simplify This

Use when something feels too complex.

“Simplify this into the smallest possible steps I can take right now:
[Paste task or problem]”

5. Decision Filter

Use when you’re overthinking.

“I’m trying to decide between these options:
[Options]

Help me eliminate what doesn’t matter and choose the simplest path forward.”

None of these are complicated.

That’s the point.

When your mental capacity is low, complexity is the problem.

Why This Still Doesn’t Stick

Even with simple prompts like these, something still breaks.

When you’re tired you forget what works.
You default to old habits.
You ask vague questions again.

And suddenly you’re back in the same loop.

More output.
More decisions.
More friction.

Knowing what to ask isn’t always enough.

You need a way to make AI respond differently by default.

A Simpler Way to Use AI on Low-Energy Days

This is exactly what I kept running into.

The prompts helped, but only when I remembered to use them.

So I took it a step further and I set up AI to automatically:

  • limit how much it gives me
  • simplify responses
  • focus on one clear direction

So even when I’m not thinking clearly, it still responds in a way I can actually use.

If you want something like that, I put the full setup together here:

Burnout-Safe AI Setup Guide

It’s designed for low-energy workdays when you don’t need more ideas.

You don’t need better questions. You need fewer decisions when your brain is already tired.

That’s what actually makes the difference.

author avatar
Chris
Chris Cage is a health-tech product manager, mental health advocate, author of the book Still Human, and creator of The Mental Lens, a platform focused on clarity, sustainable productivity, and human-centered thinking in a machine-driven world.
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