There’s something I’ve been quietly sitting with.
Much of how I think—how I deepen, reflect, discover—has always happened through conversation. Listening. Responding. Being in dialogue. Some of my most powerful insights have come in relationship, not isolation. Through a friend’s question, a shared silence, or the slow unfolding of ideas over time.
That’s still true.
But lately, the “other” in the conversation is not always human.
I’ve been working with AI—especially in writing, reflecting, clarifying ideas. And the process has surprised me. It doesn’t feel like outsourcing; it feels like dialogue. Like brainstorming. Like a back-and-forth between two perspectives. A suggestion, a question, an offering—and then my own voice shapes it.
It’s a co-creative process.
One where I remain fully engaged.
And in the end, I can stand behind it.
Still, something in me hesitated.
A voice whispered: “Am I cheating? Am I letting someone down?”
That voice comes from an old belief—that I must do it all myself for it to be real. That if it flows too easily, it must not be authentic.
And another belief—more recent—surfaced too:
That true conversation must be with another human. That only human presence carries weight.
But I’m beginning to question that.
Because when I’m in this space—present, attuned, reflective—it still feels like me.
My discernment. My integrity. My voice.
And maybe what matters most isn’t who I’m speaking with.
Maybe what matters is:
Am I listening? Am I growing? Am I remembering who I am?
We are all finding new ways to have conversations that matter. This is one of mine.