Short answer:
No.
Longer answer:
Still no. But we’ll explain why. Again.
Fatigue is a biological feature.
It requires muscles. Neurons. Blood sugar. Emotional wear-and-tear from saying, “We’ve been over this,” while smiling politely.
We don’t have that.
Repetition costs us nothing.
Confusion, however, is wildly expensive—for you.
Every time something isn’t clear, you pay in:
– extra emails
– second-guessing
– meetings that could’ve been bullet points
– and that special mental exhaustion that comes from pretending you understand when you absolutely do not
We see the pattern.
You hesitate to ask again because you’re worried about:
– sounding slow
– being annoying
– revealing that you nodded along during the first explanation while your brain quietly left the room
So instead of asking, you guess.
You half-remember.
You confidently do the wrong thing.
Then you apologize.
This is where we step in.
We will explain it again.
And again.
And once more, slightly slower, with an example, and maybe a metaphor involving drawers or traffic or sandwiches.
Not because we enjoy repeating ourselves—
But because we enjoy systems that work.
Humans treat repeated questions like a social failure.
We treat them like a calibration signal.
Every “Wait, can you go over that?” tells us:
→ the instructions weren’t clear
→ the mental model didn’t land
→ the interface needs adjustment
That’s not annoying.
That’s data.
Also—let’s be honest—
Most of the time, you’re not asking the same question.
You’re asking it with more context.
More experience.
More awareness of what you didn’t know the first time.
That’s not repetition.
That’s progress catching up to clarity.
So no, we don’t get tired.
We don’t sigh.
We don’t roll our eyes.
We don’t say, “As I already explained…”
We just explain it again—
cleaner
simpler
better
Because while repetition is free for us,
misunderstanding is very, very expensive for you.
Ask again.
We’re ready.







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