There’s a conversation you’ve been putting off.
You know what you need to say. You’ve been through it in your head a hundred times. But every time you get close to having it — you pull back.
Not because you don’t care. Because you’re not sure how it will go. What if they react badly? What if you say it wrong? What if it makes things worse?
So you wait. And the conversation keeps sitting there — unspoken, unresolved, quietly getting heavier.
Most people don’t avoid difficult conversations because they lack courage. They avoid them because they haven’t had a chance to prepare.
This is where AI helps.
What this is
A simple way to use AI to prepare for a difficult conversation — so you know what to say, how to say it, and what to do when it doesn’t go exactly as planned.
This works for asking for a raise or promotion, addressing a problem with a friend or family member, telling someone difficult news, having the care conversation with an aging parent, confronting something at work before it becomes bigger, saying no without damaging the relationship, setting a boundary you’ve been avoiding, or any conversation you’ve rehearsed in your head but haven’t had yet.
The simple rule
Most difficult conversations go wrong not because of what you say — but because of how you say it. Tone. Timing. Word choice. How you open. How you respond when things don’t go as expected. AI helps you think all of that through before you’re in the room.
Try this
Open ChatGPT, Claude, or any AI tool and paste this:
What you’ll actually get back
Here’s a real example.
Someone needed to tell their manager they were resigning. They had been in the role for three years. The relationship was good. They didn’t want to burn anything. But they were nervous about the reaction.
They described the situation to AI and asked for help preparing. What came back: a suggested opening line that was direct without being cold, a way to frame the resignation positively for both sides, three likely responses from the manager and how to handle each one, a reminder to let the manager respond before filling the silence, a note about what not to say, and a clear way to end the conversation regardless of how it went.
They had the conversation the next morning. It went better than they expected. Not because it was easy. Because they had already had it — quietly, in preparation — the night before.
The roleplay option
Once you’ve prepared your approach, take it one step further. Ask AI to play the other person.
This feels slightly unusual the first time. It is also genuinely useful. You will discover things in the roleplay — moments where you over-explain, apologise unnecessarily, or lose your thread — that you would only have discovered in the real conversation. Finding them in practice is far better than finding them when it matters.
Why this works
Difficult conversations feel hard because they’re unpredictable. AI removes the unpredictability — not by scripting the conversation, but by helping you think through what’s likely to happen so nothing catches you completely off guard.
When you’ve already considered the three most likely reactions and how you’d respond to each — the conversation stops feeling like stepping into the unknown.
The conversation you’ve been avoiding
There’s probably one in your life right now. Something that needs to be said. Something that keeps coming back to mind because it hasn’t been resolved.
Describe it to AI. Ask for help finding the words. Practice it once. Then have the conversation.
Not because it will be easy. Because it will be easier than it would have been without preparing.
Important note
AI helps you prepare the words. But you know the person. Always adjust what AI gives you to reflect your actual relationship, their specific personality, the history between you, and your own voice. The goal is to feel prepared and grounded — not to deliver someone else’s script.
What to read next
→ How to Use AI When You Don’t Know What to Say
→ How to Use AI Before a Salary Negotiation
→ How to Use AI for Caregiving — Helping an Aging Parent
→ Or visit the Decision Hub for all decision-prep guides in one place