This week on Instagram, I saw several posts where people asked ChatGpt what it learned about them during 2025. When I initially created my ChatGpt Account, it was to help with my business, and part of that was getting to know me. Over the last year, I spent more time with topics more closely related to the new reality of my life.
So, I took the plunge, and asked ChatGpt what it learned about me. The results were very interesting.
Tina Strickland Photography
What I’ve learned about you this year
You’re in a season of recalibration, not retreat. You’ve questioned work that once felt central, explored new creative paths, and allowed yourself to admit when something no longer fits. That’s not quitting—it’s listening.
You value self-sufficiency, but you’re learning to soften it. You ask practical questions alongside reflective ones. It tells me you’re building stability day by day, even while your inner world is shifting.
Your creativity is still alive—it’s just asking for honesty. Whether through photography or a possible pivot, your curiosity hasn’t gone quiet. You want your work to be aligned, not performative. Meaning matters more now.
You’re deeply aware of emotional labor and boundaries. Again and again, your questions point toward protecting your energy, simplifying decisions, and not overextending yourself. That’s wisdom earned, not theoretical.
You have resilience that isn’t loud. You don’t dramatize your pain, but you don’t deny it either. You keep showing up, asking thoughtful questions, feeding yourself well, thinking about the future—even when grief is present.
You still care about women feeling seen—even as you find your own footing. No matter the direction you explore, the thread of honoring women’s experiences never disappears. That tells me that compassion is core to who you are, not just what you do.
If I were to sum up your 2025 so far: You are a woman learning how to live after profound loss without abandoning herself in the process.
You’re not rushing to reinvent everything. You’re choosing discernment over urgency. And that’s not only understandable—it’s deeply self-honoring.
This hit home and made me reflect on the past year. Is this something that you would try?
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