It's Me. Your Brain. | The mind behind your decisions

What You Lose When AI Remembers for You - with Lucy Dinu

33 min · 14 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio What You Lose When AI Remembers for You - with Lucy Dinu

Descripción

The strategy built in minutes. The brief drafted before the meeting ended. The answer retrieved before the question was fully formed. Everything faster. Everything smoother. And somewhere in that efficiency, something quietly shifting. This episode is about what happens to the brain when AI takes the cognitive load, what gets offloaded, what stops being encoded, and what leaders need to deliberately protect before they notice it's gone. In this episode: * What cognitive offloading actually is, and why the brain does it automatically * Why integrating AI changes not just how you work, but how you think * What most executives aren't asking when they bring AI in, and what that's costing them * The difference between retrieving intelligence and building it * What human judgement actually means when the tools get this good Virginia Palm's guest is Lucy Dinu, founder and managing director of KHAIO, an AI architecture firm that helps executives architect AI integration, building both the technical structure and the human judgement that decides whether the rest of it holds. Her path runs from opening her own restaurant at 20 to over a decade leading global teams across 50 markets in pharma, finance, automotive, hospitality, and the public sector. Originally from Romania, she has lived in the Netherlands, dreams of living in Japan, but currently calls Stuttgart, Germany home. It's Me. Your Brain. | The mind behind your decisions.

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21 episodios

Portada del episodio What You Lose When AI Remembers for You - with Lucy Dinu

What You Lose When AI Remembers for You - with Lucy Dinu

The strategy built in minutes. The brief drafted before the meeting ended. The answer retrieved before the question was fully formed. Everything faster. Everything smoother. And somewhere in that efficiency, something quietly shifting. This episode is about what happens to the brain when AI takes the cognitive load, what gets offloaded, what stops being encoded, and what leaders need to deliberately protect before they notice it's gone. In this episode: * What cognitive offloading actually is, and why the brain does it automatically * Why integrating AI changes not just how you work, but how you think * What most executives aren't asking when they bring AI in, and what that's costing them * The difference between retrieving intelligence and building it * What human judgement actually means when the tools get this good Virginia Palm's guest is Lucy Dinu, founder and managing director of KHAIO, an AI architecture firm that helps executives architect AI integration, building both the technical structure and the human judgement that decides whether the rest of it holds. Her path runs from opening her own restaurant at 20 to over a decade leading global teams across 50 markets in pharma, finance, automotive, hospitality, and the public sector. Originally from Romania, she has lived in the Netherlands, dreams of living in Japan, but currently calls Stuttgart, Germany home. It's Me. Your Brain. | The mind behind your decisions.

14 de jun de 202633 min
Portada del episodio Brain Capital - The Asset Nobody's Managing

Brain Capital - The Asset Nobody's Managing

Brain Capital - The Asset Nobody's Managing. Why the Most Important Asset in Your Organisation Is the One Nobody Is Measuring Most organisations manage their buildings, their technology, their financial capital with rigour and intention. The cognitive capacity of the people doing the thinking, the brains running every meeting, every decision, every strategy, is largely unmanaged, often actively depleted, and almost never measured. In January 2026, brain capital arrived at the main stage of the World Economic Forum in Davos. Not in the wellness tent. In the core economic agenda. The McKinsey Health Institute and the World Economic Forum published a landmark report arguing that in the AI era, investment in brain capital - brain health and brain skills, is not an optional wellbeing initiative. It is the most important infrastructure decision most organisations aren't making. In this episode, Virginia Palm, breaks down what brain capital actually is, why the numbers demand a boardroom conversation, what is depleting it in most high-performance environments - including an AI paradox most leaders haven't seen coming - and what building it looks like at the level of strategy, team design, and individual leadership. You'll learn: * Why brain capital is defined as two interdependent components, brain health and brain skills, and why you cannot optimise one while neglecting the other * What $3.5 trillion, 12 billion working days, and 1 in 5 professionals actually tell us, and why these are economic figures, not health statistics * Why the AI era creates a paradox: human cognitive skills become most valuable exactly when the conditions of work are most reliably depleting them * What the five levers of brain capital investment look like at the level of a leadership team, and what most organisations are still missing * Why this is not a wellness conversation, and what it means to treat cognitive capacity as the strategic asset it is If you manage anything - a team, a function, an organisation - this is the conversation your strategy is missing. 🌐 www.augment-mind.com [http://www.augmentmind.de/]

7 de jun de 202623 min
Portada del episodio From the Outside: Successful. From the Inside: Dysregulated.

From the Outside: Successful. From the Inside: Dysregulated.

The apartment in front of the ocean. The titles. The recognition. Everything on paper looking exactly right. And underneath it, something slowly, quietly, falling apart. This episode is about high-functioning burnout: what it looks like from the inside before it breaks, why the people closest to you don't see it, and why the system you need to read the warning signs is the same system being quietly degraded by them. In this episode: * What it actually feels like to be performing well and dysregulated at the same time * Why the signals were there, and why the brain couldn't receive them * What happens when you do everything right and it still isn't enough * The second collapse, and what it taught that the first one couldn't * What came back first when the body finally stopped Virginia Palm's guest is Camila Santiago, a therapeutic mindfulness mentor and founder of The Grounded Way, where she works with companies, founders, and individuals, both remotely and in person, to navigate mental overload, decision fatigue, and high-performance pressure. Recognised as a Top 100 Women Voices on LinkedIn and ranked #2 in Workplace Wellbeing, she brings over a decade of mindfulness practice and firsthand experience of burnout in corporate environments to deliver practical, real-world tools for clearer thinking and more sustainable leadership. Originally from Brazil, she now lives in Bali, where her work is shaped by both structured practice and lived experience. Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/camilapsantiago/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/camilapsantiago/] Website:  www.thegroundedway.life [http://www.thegroundedway.life/] Email: hello@thegroundedway.org [hello@thegroundedway.org] It's Me. Your Brain. | The mind behind your decisions.

24 de may de 202630 min
Portada del episodio You Know the Science. So Why Hasn't Anything Changed?

You Know the Science. So Why Hasn't Anything Changed?

You Know the Science. So Why Hasn't Anything Changed? Why insight and behaviour change are two different neurological events, and what to do about it You've read the books. You've been in the workshops. Something clicked. And then Monday arrived, and you were exactly the same person you were before. This isn't a motivation problem. It isn't a discipline problem. It's a neuroscience problem. And once you understand what's actually happening in the brain, the gap between knowing and changing stops feeling like a personal failing, and starts looking like a design problem. Design problems have solutions. In this Season 2 opener, Virginia explores why understanding something and changing something happen in completely different parts of the brain, and what the brain actually requires to build something genuinely new. In this episode:  * Why insight lands in the prefrontal cortex but automatic behaviour lives in the basal ganglia, and why those two don't automatically communicate * How the amygdala keeps old patterns running, even in people who are highly self-aware and genuinely motivated to change * What deliberate practice actually means neurologically, and why most leadership development misses it entirely * The four conditions the brain needs to change: repetition, specificity, emotional salience, and safety * Why high performers are often the most stuck, and what that says about the conditions they're operating in Research referenced: Anders Ericsson; Deliberate Practice and Acquisition of Expert Performance (Academic Emergency Medicine, 2008) McKinsey & Company; What's missing in leadership development? Global executive survey The brain is not failing you. The conditions are failing your brain. Season 2 starts here.

17 de may de 202616 min
Portada del episodio Your Brain Was Never the Problem

Your Brain Was Never the Problem

Sixteen episodes. One argument underneath all of them. In this Season 1 finale, Virginia Palm names what the show has been building toward, and what it means for Season 2. In this episode: * Why your brain was never the problem, and what actually was * The thread that ran through every solo episode without being named * What Yasmina and Monika showed about what happens when you stop fighting your brain and start designing around it * The pattern Virginia didn't plan but kept finding across the season * What's coming in Season 2, and why it's different from everything so far Plus: an honest note on why the show is moving to a fortnightly schedule. If you're new here, welcome. The episodes don't build on each other, so start wherever something catches your attention. It's Me. Your Brain. - The Mind Behind Your Decisions.

10 de may de 202613 min