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Found 12 Skills
Review your Google Calendar week, identify gaps, and add events to fill them.
ADHD-friendly life management assistant providing external scaffolding for executive function challenges. Use when the user asks for help with daily planning, task breakdown, time management, prioritization, body doubling, dopamine regulation, or maintaining routines. Triggers on requests about organizing life, staying on top of tasks, beating procrastination, planning day/week, managing overwhelm, or ADHD-related challenges like time blindness, forgetfulness, difficulty starting tasks, emotional dysregulation, shame/guilt about productivity, or feeling stuck/paralyzed.
Protect your deep work time. Calendar Audit scores every meeting on your calendar, calculates your deep work gap, and makes specific suggestions to reclaim focus time. Supports multiple calendar tools (screenshot, Google Calendar MCP, Apple Calendar, icalBuddy, gcalcli) and scoring frameworks (5-Dimension, Eisenhower, RACI, Value vs Effort, Custom). Value first — your first audit takes 2 minutes with just a screenshot. Just say "calendar-audit" to get going.
Master the AI tools that handle administrative work and boost personal productivity. From meeting notes to email management, get more done with less effort. Use when "meeting notes, email management, calendar optimization, productivity, time management, productivity, meetings, email, calendar, personal" mentioned.
Balance the 4 types of professional time (Management, Creation, Consumption, Ideation). Use when discussing productivity, calendar management, time allocation, or work-life balance.
AI calendar assistant for time management and scheduling.
Efficiently route multi-stop trips with time management. Include transportation, restaurant/activity reservations timeline, and buffer time for spontaneity.
Timely Time Tracking integration. Manage data, records, and automate workflows. Use when the user wants to interact with Timely Time Tracking data.
"What is important is seldom urgent and what is urgent is seldom important." Master Dwight D. Eisenhower's prioritization framework to focus on what truly matters. Use when: **Feeling overwhelmed** by too many tasks and not enough time; **Weekly planning** to set priorities for the week ahead; **Daily triage** when everything seems urgent; **Delegation decisions** to identify what others should handle; **Saying no** by recognizing tasks that shouldn't be done at all
Help a PhD student intentionally choose which cognitive mode to enter right now (deep production, wide reading, or collaborative engagement) and plan their day around these modes to minimize context-switching costs. Use this skill whenever the user is at the start of a day or work block and unsure what to focus on, feels scattered across too many activities, asks "what should I do right now", wants to plan their day, or feels frustrated by constant context-switching. Trigger on phrases like "plan my day", "what should I work on now", "I feel scattered", "context switching", "deep work", "can't focus", "I have X hours", or whenever the user is trying to decide between substantively different kinds of work (writing vs reading vs meetings).
Analyze meeting load over a time range: total meetings, meeting hours, busiest days, back-to-back chains, and free blocks.
Schedule meetings between people using the `gws` CLI (Google Calendar). Use when the user wants to find a meeting time, schedule a meeting, check availability, or book time with someone. Triggers on requests like "schedule a meeting with X", "find time with Y", "book a 1:1", "when can I meet with Z", "set up a sync".