I keep switching between amazement and a low-level unease as AI gets better. One moment I’m watching it tidy my messy notes into a neat summary. Next, I’m wondering what happens when “good enough” turns into “better than most”.
I use AI in my day-to-day work. It helps with emails, spelling, and quick reports. It also gives me creative support, like idea prompts and rough outlines, or a sense-check on trends. Yet I don’t want it to replace the part of making that gives the work meaning. That’s the bit that teaches me taste, patience, and judgement.
Here’s the tension I can’t ignore. Audiences often don’t care how something was made, they care if it works. Creators care deeply, because the process shapes the person behind the work. Trust sits in the middle. If my audience can’t tell what’s real, they’ll stop believing any of it. That’s why Ai Human Creativity still needs a human at the centre, not just a human clicking “approve”.



