Tag Archives: technology

Post # 62

Enhancing Creativity in the Age of AI: Embrace, Don’t Fear!

Artificial Intelligence is everywhere today. It writes emails, creates images, generates ideas, summarises documents, and even helps people code. For some, it has become an indispensable assistant. For others, it feels like a threat to originality itself.

But perhaps we are asking the wrong question. The real debate is not whether AI is good or bad. The real question is: Are we using AI as a tool, or are we letting it think for us?

Artificial Intelligence vs Human Abilities

Tools Have Always Helped Humans

Throughout history, technology has simplified work. Knives substituted for cutting tools for early man. Calculators reduced manual calculations. Search engines made information easier to find. Smartphones placed entire libraries in our pockets. Yet none of these inventions replaced human intelligence. They enhanced it.

AI belongs in the same category. Using AI to speed up research, organise thoughts, improve grammar, or generate starting points is not cheating.  It is simply about using a modern tool to become more efficient. The problem begins when convenience replaces contribution.

When Assistance Turns Into Dependence

Imagine asking AI to write an article. You copy the output, publish it without editing, and move on. The article may look polished. It may even sound professional. But what part of it is truly yours?

Your experiences, observations, opinions, and perspective are what make your content unique. When those disappear, the result may still be readable, but it often lacks authenticity. The same applies beyond writing.

Students may rely on AI to complete assignments without understanding the topic. Designers may generate visuals without developing concepts. Professionals may use AI-generated responses without critical thinking. In each case, the work gets done. But the skill behind the work slowly weakens.

Creativity Is a Muscle

Creativity is not something people either have or do not have. It is something that develops through practice. Every time we solve a problem, write a draft, sketch an idea, or think through a challenge, we strengthen our ability to create.

When AI handles every step, we miss those opportunities. Just as muscles weaken when they are not used, creative thinking can become less sharp when we stop exercising it. AI can save time. It should not entirely replace the thinking process.

The Best Use of AI

The most effective people are not those who avoid AI. They are the ones who know how to collaborate with it. Use AI to:

  • Brainstorm ideas
  • Speed up repetitive tasks
  • Research topics faster
  • Improve clarity and structure
  • Explore different perspectives

But do not stop there. Question the output. Refine it. Add your own insights. Challenge assumptions. Make it better. Treat AI as an assistant, not an author of your identity.

The Human Abilities Still Matter

AI can process vast amounts of information. What it cannot replicate perfectly is human experience. It cannot live your life, learn your lessons, build your relationships, or develop your personal perspective.

That is where originality comes from. Your story. Your voice. Your way of seeing the world. Those remain valuable, regardless of how advanced technology becomes.

In My Opinion

AI is not the enemy of creativity. Blind dependence on it is. Technology should help us think better, not think less. The goal is not to reject AI. The goal is to use it wisely. Because in a world where machines can generate content in seconds, genuine human thought may become more valuable than ever.


AI is becoming a part of everyday life, whether we welcome it or not. Do you see AI as a tool that enhances your work, or do you think it is making people less creative over time? I would love to hear your perspective. Share your thoughts in the comments below and join the conversation. If you found this article useful, feel free to share it with someone who uses AI in their daily life. Let’s discuss how we can embrace technology without losing the human creativity that makes our ideas truly original.