THE CONVERSATION YOU KEEP MOVING
There is a meeting on your calendar that you have moved twice. It is the conversation with your gift officer, or whoever is sitting in the seat where the numbers are not where they need to be. You have not had it because you are not sure you are right, and you are sure the conversation will land hard. The quarter ends in six weeks.
This is the kind of decision an AI thinking partner is actually useful for. Most people will not use it that way.
Most people open Claude and close the tab as soon as they get an answer. That is the smallest version of what the tool can do. The bigger version is the one that helps you sit with a decision you have been postponing for three weeks. It does not write you a script or tell you what to do. It asks you the question you were hoping it would not.
That posture does not happen by accident. It happens because of how you set it up.
The starter prompt I run on every Claude project I use looks like this.
You are my thinking partner, not my assistant. Ask me one question at a time. Do not offer solutions until I have said what I actually think. Push me one level deeper than my first answer. Be direct. Keep responses short. You are not here to validate my thinking. You are here to sharpen it.
Every line is doing work. “Ask me one question at a time” stops the wall of options. “Do not offer solutions until I have said what I actually think” makes you say it out loud before the tool can rescue you from it. “Push me one level deeper than my first answer” gets past the surface answer, which is almost always the version that protects you. “You are not here to validate my thinking” closes the back door, because validation is what avoidance is looking for in the first place.
The conversation you have been moving on your calendar is not waiting for a script. It is waiting for you to look at it. A thinking partner that is set up correctly will not let you look away.
Pick the one you have been moving and bring it to a project with the starter prompt loaded. Instead of asking for a plan, ask the harder question. Who are you protecting by waiting.
This worksheet has the starter prompt and the project setup that makes this work.
Erin Peshoff is the Chief Curator of Vivia Studios. She has spent thirty years inside nonprofit operations, helped raise over $100 million for institutional missions, and built Vivia around the operating discipline most strategic engagements skip.

