Tier 2 · 8 weeks

Embodied Business in the Age of AI

Powerful technology should not require leaving the body or the life beneath the work.

The recognition

AI can multiply output while quietly eroding provenance, attention, judgment, relationship, and the felt sense of when enough has been made.

Embodied Business in the Age of AI is a practical third path between rejecting the technology and surrendering the business to it. The tool can increase capacity without becoming the source of authority.

The eight-week passage builds an operating relationship with AI grounded in authorship, consent, human scale, living context, and work that still sounds and feels like the person responsible for it.

A look inside

The movement of the passage.

Each movement combines clear language, embodied noticing, practical decisions, and integration in the rooms where the crossing is already happening.

Movement 01

Name the human work

Identify the judgment, relationship, risk, voice, and responsibility that cannot be delegated.

Movement 02

Build clean collaboration

Create provenance, review, privacy, and prompting practices that preserve authorship.

Movement 03

Return output to the body

Notice speed, compulsion, fatigue, aliveness, and when the tool has outrun integration.

Movement 04

Design a human-scale system

Set boundaries, workflows, off-ramps, and measures that serve the life beneath the business.

What you receive

Complete on arrival.

  • Eight weekly strategy and embodiment chapters
  • An AI authorship and provenance framework
  • Workflow, boundary, and review templates
  • A personal human-scale operating doctrine

How it fits ordinary life

The experience is designed for self-directed use. Most people spend twenty to forty-five minutes with a weekly chapter, then let the practice travel through the conversations, choices, routines, and bodily responses of the days that follow.

Boundary

This is educational and reflective work. It does not diagnose or treat a medical or mental-health condition and is not crisis, grief-clinical, legal, financial, or emergency support. Where safety or clinical care is needed, qualified support belongs beside or before this work.