Thereâs a quiet fear no one wants to admit out loud.
It shows up in side-eyes during team meetings, in late-night doomscrolling, in that subtle question echoing through our generationâs collective anxiety:
Whatâs the point? If artificial intelligence is going to write the next great novel, design the next viral campaign, launch the next billion-dollar business â faster, cheaper, and more efficiently than you or I ever could â then why try? Why put in the hours, the sweat, the effort?
Why bother getting better?
Itâs a question that haunts not just creatives or coders or marketers. Itâs haunting humanity. The unsettling idea that maybe weâve reached the edge of usefulness. That the race weâve been running â to be better, smarter, more skilled â is about to be won by a machine that doesnât sleep, doesnât feel, doesnât forget.
But hereâs what we forget in return:
We donât grow because the world demands it. We grow because something inside us refuses to stop.
AI might automate what we do. But it cannot automate why we do it.
The Fallacy of Replacement
Letâs be real. Yes, AI will disrupt industries. It already is. Whole workflows reduced to prompts. Creative outputs generated in seconds. Copy, code, concept â replicated, iterated, shipped. And itâs only just beginning.
But here’s a truth too many are missing:
Being better was never just about productivity.
You didnât start painting to beat an algorithm. You didnât learn to lead because you thought a robot couldnât. You didnât choose empathy, or poetry, or patience because it would get you ahead.
You chose those things because they made you more human.
Better was never the enemy of automation. Better was the quiet rebellion against stagnation. Itâs what built pyramids, painted ceilings, fought injustice, and sent ships across oceans.
And now â weâre being called to define âbetterâ again.
What AI Canât Touch
Letâs get philosophical for a second.
AI can simulate kindness. It can write poetry about grief. It can mimic your voice, your humor, even your childhood trauma.
But it doesnât know what any of it means.
Itâs never held a dying parentâs hand. Itâs never wept at the sound of a song you havenât heard since you were twelve. It doesnât get nervous before an interview. It doesnât get butterflies before a kiss.
It doesnât hope. It doesnât dream. It doesnât choose.
And therein lies the point. You do.
The Point of Getting Better
The point isnât to compete with the machine. Itâs to remember what the machine can never be.
Better isnât about being faster. Itâs about being braver. Itâs about choosing excellence in a world that rewards convenience. Itâs about creating not because we must â but because we can.
When we choose to become better â as professionals, as friends, as partners, as humans â we are declaring, in defiance and in hope:
âI still matter. My effort still matters. My growth still matters.â
History will remember those who embraced the tools, yes. But it will honor those who never lost their soul while using them.
One Last Thing
Progress will automate the world. But only purpose will save it.
So write the damn poem. Learn the new skill. Start the business. Show up, even when itâs hard. Love people when itâs inconvenient. Be better â not because the machine is watchingâŚ
âŚbut because someone who needed your humanity is.