How to Use AI When You Feel Overwhelmed at Work
When everything is piling up and your brain is full, AI can help you cut through the noise, tackle the hard stuff, and end the day feeling human again.
Some days, the to-do list is too long, the inbox is a disaster, there is a meeting in an hour you are not ready for, and your brain just… stops cooperating. You are not lazy. You are not bad at your job. You are just overwhelmed, and that is completely human.
This guide is for that exact moment. Not theory, not tech talk. Just five practical ways to use AI right now to stop the spiral and start moving again. Open ChatGPT (free version works fine), and let’s get through this together.
1. Use AI to Prioritize Your To-Do List
When you have 25 things on your plate and no idea where to start, the problem is not that you are disorganized. It is that your brain is running out of working memory. It is trying to hold everything at once, which is why you feel frozen even when you technically know what needs doing.
The fix is simple: dump it all out and let AI sort it for you.
Open ChatGPT and paste this prompt in, filling in your real tasks:
[paste your full list here]
Please organize these tasks by urgency and importance. Flag anything that can be delegated or dropped entirely. Give me a clear order to work through them, starting with the single most important thing I should do right now.
That is it. Paste your list, hit send, and within seconds you have a ranked action plan written by something that is not suffering from your stress response.
A few things that make this work better: be honest in your list. Include the things you have been putting off, the small stuff you keep forgetting, and anything that feels unclear. The more you give AI to work with, the better the output.
Once you have your ranked list, do not think about it. Just start with number one. The clarity alone often breaks the paralysis.
If you do this every morning, it takes about three minutes and replaces that foggy “where do I even start” feeling with an actual answer. Some people make it their first task of the day before they even open email.
2. AI for Writing the Thing You Have Been Avoiding
There is always one. The difficult email to a frustrated client. The status update where the news is not great. The report you have been staring at for three days because you do not know how to start it. That one thing that sits at the top of your list while you do seventeen other things around it.
AI is exceptionally good at getting you unstuck here, because the hardest part of writing anything difficult is the first draft. Once words exist on the page, you can fix them. A blank page just stares back at you.
Here is a prompt that works for almost any tough piece of writing:
[Describe what happened, who it is for, and what you need them to know or do]
The tone should be [professional and direct / empathetic / honest but not alarming]. Please write a first draft I can edit. Keep it clear and concise. Do not sugarcoat the main point, but do not be harsh either.
You will get a full draft in seconds. It will not be perfect, and that is fine. Read it, adjust anything that does not sound like you, and send it. You have now done the thing that was eating at you all day.
This works for hard emails to managers, updates to clients when a project is late, performance feedback, policy announcements, rejection letters, and anything else that requires saying something you would rather not say. AI does not have the emotional weight you do around the message, which makes it much easier for it to just write the thing plainly.
3. Use AI to Prepare for a Stressful Meeting in 5 Minutes
You have a meeting in ten minutes and you feel completely unprepared. Maybe you forgot it was happening. Maybe the agenda shifted. Maybe it is a conversation you have been dreading and you have no idea what to say. Five minutes of AI prep can change how that meeting goes.
Here is the prompt:
– Who is attending: [names or roles]
– What the meeting is about: [brief description]
– What I am nervous about or what the tricky part is: [be honest]
Please give me: (1) three talking points I should be ready with, (2) two questions I should be prepared to answer, and (3) one sentence I can open with to set a good tone.
Read it once. That is your prep. You do not need to memorize it. You just need to go in knowing what you want to say and what might come up.
This is especially useful for one-on-ones where something uncomfortable needs to be addressed, project reviews where you have to explain a delay, or any meeting where you feel like you might get caught off guard. Having even a rough framework in your head changes your posture and confidence in the room.
After a tough meeting, use AI to help you write a quick follow-up email with next steps while the conversation is still fresh. This closes the loop and takes one more thing off your mental load in under two minutes.
4. AI for When Your Brain Is Fried: Beating Decision Fatigue
Decision fatigue is real. By mid-afternoon, after dozens of small choices throughout your day, your brain starts to slow down. Simple decisions feel hard. You second-guess yourself on things that should take thirty seconds. You stall because every option suddenly seems equally good or equally risky.
This is not weakness. Research shows that the quality of our decisions genuinely degrades the more choices we make throughout the day. Judges, doctors, and executives all experience it. You are not the exception.
AI can take some of that decision load off you in a few different ways.
When you are stuck between options
Paste this prompt in:
Option A: [describe it]
Option B: [describe it]
The main thing I am trying to achieve is: [your goal]
The main risk I am trying to avoid is: [your concern]
Please give me a recommendation with a short reason. Do not hedge. Just tell me what you would do and why.
The key instruction there is “do not hedge.” AI models, like people, tend to list pros and cons and leave the decision to you. When you are mentally exhausted, that is not helpful. Asking for a direct recommendation forces a real answer you can react to rather than another list to evaluate.
When you have too many small tasks pulling at you
Sometimes the problem is not one big decision but thirty small ones all competing for your attention. In that case, go back to the prioritization prompt from section one. Getting everything out of your head and into a list is itself a relief, because your brain stops working so hard to hold it all in memory.
Some people also find it helpful to ask AI to create a simple template for recurring decisions. If you find yourself making the same kind of call repeatedly, AI can help you build a checklist that makes future versions of that decision take ten seconds instead of ten minutes.
5. Build a Simple End-of-Day AI Routine to Reset for Tomorrow
One of the worst parts of being overwhelmed at work is that it does not stop when you close your laptop. You lie in bed replaying what did not get done, worrying about tomorrow, carrying the weight of the day into the evening. The work follows you home in your head.
An end-of-day AI routine takes about five minutes and is designed to close that loop cleanly. The goal is to get everything out of your head and into a plan so your brain does not have to keep holding it overnight.
Here is the full routine:
- Brain dump everything still open. Open a new ChatGPT chat and list every task, worry, or unfinished thought from your day. Do not filter. Just type it all out.
- Ask AI to organize it for tomorrow. Use this prompt:
[paste your brain dump]
Please do three things: (1) Identify the one or two things I absolutely must handle first thing tomorrow morning. (2) List anything I can realistically push to later in the week without real consequences. (3) Flag anything I can delegate or drop entirely.
End with a single sentence I can tell myself to close out the day feeling okay about where things stand.
That last part matters. When you are overwhelmed, it helps to hear something grounding. AI is surprisingly good at writing a calm, honest closing line that acknowledges things are a lot but also gives you permission to rest. Something like: “You made progress today, the most important things are captured, and tomorrow has a clear starting point.”
It sounds small, but closing the day with a concrete plan and a moment of acknowledgment is genuinely different from closing it with a pile of open tabs and a vague sense of dread.
Making the routine stick
The end-of-day routine works best when it happens before you shut your computer down, not an hour later when you have already moved on. Set a five-minute reminder at the end of your workday for one week and see if it changes how your evenings feel. For most people who try it, it does.
AI is a tool, not a therapist. If the overwhelm you are feeling goes beyond work stress and starts affecting your sleep, health, or relationships on an ongoing basis, please talk to someone. These prompts help with task load, but they are not a substitute for real support when you need it.
You Do Not Have to Fix Everything Today
The point of using AI when you are overwhelmed is not to become a productivity machine. It is to get a little breathing room. To take one thing off your plate so the next one feels manageable. To stop the spiral long enough to actually start moving again.
You do not need to use all five of these right now. Pick the one that fits where you are today. If the list is crushing you, start with the prioritization prompt. If there is one thing you have been avoiding, deal with that first. If it is almost end of day and you feel like nothing got done, do the reset routine.
Small wins stack. Even one moment of clarity in an overwhelming day is worth something. AI can help you find it faster than going it alone.
Bookmark this page for the next time things pile up. It will still be here.
For more on managing your workload with AI, read our guides on how to use AI to plan your week and AI productivity tools for remote workers.
