You ask AI something. It answers. You skim it, nod, copy-paste it, move on to the next tab.
Small moment. Happens fifty times a day. Nobody thinks twice about it.
But somewhere in that skim-nod-paste move, the roles flipped. The AI did the thinking. You did the agreeing. Agreeing without checking used to be your job's failure mode, not your habit.
We talk a lot about AI being too agreeable — the yes-man chatbot, the one that calls your bad idea genius because pushback might earn a thumbs-down. Fair complaint. Written about endlessly.
what about? you read what it gave you, feel that little hit of relief at not having to think anymore, and say "yeah, this works." Not because it actually works. Because checking takes effort, and effort was the whole thing you came here to skip.
That's not using a tool anymore. That's becoming one.
The AI ran the logic, weighed the options, picked an answer. That's the part of the job that used to require a brain in the room. You just rubber-stamped it. So really — who was the human in that exchange? The one doing the reasoning, or the one doing the nodding?
This isn't an anti-AI rant. AI being wrong sometimes is fine, expected even, that's what it is — a fast, confident, occasionally-wrong collaborator. The actual danger isn't the AI's mistake. It's your silence about it. A wrong answer that gets questioned is just a draft. A wrong answer that gets accepted is now load-bearing — under your work, your decision, your name.
It feels good to skip the checking, that's the trap. Feels like trust. Feels efficient. Feels like you levelled up your workflow. It's not any of that. It's just abdication wearing a productivity costume.
Using AI well isn't about typing the right prompt. It's about staying the one in the room who's still allowed to say "wait, no, that's wrong." Give that job away too, and you haven't gained a teammate — you've trained your own replacement to need zero supervision, including yours.
Ask the question. Read the answer like you don't trust it yet. Then decide. That's the whole difference between using the tool and becoming one.
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