Artificial intelligence is not short of commentary.
Every week brings new tools, new predictions, and new claims about who will be disrupted, replaced, or left behind. Most of this conversation focuses on capability, and what AI can do faster, cheaper, or at greater scale.
But working closely with doctors, lawyers, founders, CEOs, and senior executives, I’m seeing something very different.
Not panic.
Not hype.
Not obsession.
What I see instead is selective adoption, guarded trust, and a growing cognitive load that rarely gets named.
The burden AI creates for high achievers isn’t technical.
It’s psychological, emotional, and reputational.
And unless leaders recognise that distinction, they risk accelerating themselves into noise rather than clarity.
The New Invisible Pressure: “Keep Up — But Don’t Get Caught Out”
For most high performers, AI has not arrived as a dramatic rupture.
It has crept in quietly:
- administrative support
- documentation
- process automation
- background efficiency
Very few senior professionals I work with are delegating judgement or responsibility to AI; particularly in regulated, high-stakes environments such as medicine, law, or governance.
Instead, what’s emerging is a double bind:
- You’re expected to keep up.
- You remain fully accountable if something goes wrong.
This creates a subtle but persistent strain.
High achievers are not worried about being replaced.
They are concerned about being exposed by something they did not personally verify.
That is not fear.
It is professional seriousness.
Research published in Harvard Business Review consistently shows that decision quality deteriorates under time pressure and information overload, especially when leaders are required to integrate unfamiliar inputs into already complex judgement calls.
AI accelerates this dynamic.
It does not resolve it.
Speed increases.
Certainty does not.
The Identity Tax: When Expertise Starts to Feel Lighter
One of the least discussed impacts of AI is what it does to professional identity.
Many high achievers have spent decades developing judgement:
- knowing what matters
- knowing what to ignore
- knowing when not to act
When tasks that once required experience suddenly appear “easy”, a quiet question emerges:
If this is now automated, what exactly is my value?
This isn’t classic impostor syndrome.
It’s a more modern strain… an identity tension created by the commoditisation of surface expertise.
A surgeon still owns the decision.
A lawyer still carries the risk.
A CEO still signs the outcome.
But the felt sense of expertise begins to shift.
Medical literature published in the BMJ has explored this dynamic in relation to clinical decision-support systems, showing that when tools encroach on judgement without clear boundaries, clinicians experience increased cognitive load and reduced confidence; even when outcomes improve.
AI doesn’t remove responsibility.
It destabilises how responsibility feels.
More Information Does Not Equal Better Judgement
One of the enduring myths of modern leadership is that more data leads to better decisions.
In reality, judgement deteriorates when leaders are required to process:
- more inputs
- more options
- more “helpful” suggestions
without more time or space to think.
This isn’t new.
What is new is the volume and velocity at which optionality now appears.
AI increases:
- speed
- output
- availability of answers
But it also increases decision fatigue; a phenomenon well documented in behavioural science and executive research.
Forbes has repeatedly highlighted that leaders rarely fail because they lack intelligence. They fail because they make too many decisions, too quickly, under sustained pressure.
AI amplifies this risk.
Which raises a critical question:
Are you using AI to create space, or to accelerate the treadmill?
Why Some Leaders Appear Unbothered
Not all high achievers experience the AI burden equally.
In practice, I see three broad patterns:
- Quiet adopters who use AI tactically without outsourcing judgement
- Comparative users who worry what others are doing and why
- Traditionalist leaders who simply grind harder and largely ignore the shift
None of these positions is inherently right or wrong.
But only one is sustainable.
The leaders who cope best are not the most technical.
They are the most discerning.
They know:
- where AI genuinely helps
- where it introduces risk
- where human judgement must remain non-negotiable
This aligns with decades of leadership research, including Daniel Kahneman’s work on cognitive load and Gary Klein’s research on expert judgement under pressure.
Strong leaders don’t chase every tool.
They protect judgement.
The Leadership Edge Now: Restraint, Not Acceleration
This is where the AI conversation reconnects with themes many leaders already recognise:
- The PaceTrap — when speed becomes strategy
- The Momentum Myth — motion without meaning
- Preparation vs Ego — readiness beats bravado
- Systemic Pressure — load accumulates quietly beneath success
AI isn’t a new leadership problem.
It is the same problem at a higher intensity.
The edge is not faster execution.
It is cleaner judgement.
That requires:
- restraint
- boundaries
- preparation
- reflection
And, increasingly, the courage to say:
Just because we can accelerate this doesn’t mean we should.
A Final Question for Leaders
AI is not replacing leaders.
It is replacing comfort.
Comfort in expertise.
Comfort in pace.
Comfort in knowing when “enough” is enough.
The leaders who thrive will not be those who adopt everything first, but those who decide what not to delegate, what not to accelerate, and what must remain human.
So the real question is not:
How do I use AI?
It is:
How do I protect judgement when everything speeds up?
That is the burden worth paying attention to.
Laurence Loxam
Executive Coach & Leadership Mentor
Founder, Loxam Consulting Ltd
References & Further Reading
- Kahneman, D. (2011). Thinking, Fast and Slow. Farrar, Straus and Giroux.
- Klein, G. (1998). Sources of Power: How People Make Decisions. MIT Press.
- Harvard Business Review — Decision-Making Under Pressure (editorials).
- Forbes — Executive Decision Fatigue and Leadership Pace.
- BMJ — Clinical Decision Support Systems and Cognitive Load.
- Mintzberg, H. (2009). Managing. Berrett-Koehler.
I’m Laurence Loxam – I’ve pushed limits in business, on mountains, and at the finish line.
Now I help elite professionals do the same, pushing past the point most people stop.
I coach CEOs, doctors, lawyers, and founders who’ve hit success, but still feel there’s more.
Together, we unlock clarity, sharpen confidence, and lead with conviction.
🔗 loxamconsultingltd.org
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