Posts

The Beginner’s Mindset in the Age of AI

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  The Beginner’s Mindset in the Age of AI I’ve been thinking about the beginner’s mindset lately. Not as a personality trait. Not as a phase you grow out of. But as an approach to life — and especially an approach to learning with AI. Because something interesting happens when you sit down with an AI system and you don’t pretend to know everything. You start asking questions. Real questions. Simple questions. The kind that open doors instead of closing them. Why does this work. What else is possible. What am I assuming. What am I missing. What happens if I follow this thread one more step. It’s the same posture a junior developer brings to a codebase. Not because she’s enlightened — but because she has no choice. She doesn’t know yet. So she asks. And she learns faster because of it. AI rewards that posture. It rewards curiosity. It rewards follow‑up. It rewards interrogation. It rewards the person who keeps the question alive. The expert mindset — the one that says  I already...

What I Notice in Website Writing These Days

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  What I Notice in Website Writing These Days I’ve been paying attention to the writing pushed into my daily feed. Not the long essays. Not the deep dives. Just the everyday tech news cycle. And here’s what I notice. The lead is buried. Deeply. Almost like it’s supposed to be. You click a headline that promises clarity. You get six paragraphs of warm‑up. You get context you didn’t ask for. You get a meandering tour of the writer’s internal weather. And somewhere near the bottom — there it is. The actual point. It’s curious. Because an AI would never do this. Not ever. AI leads with the lead. AI gives you the thing you came for. AI doesn’t wander around the block before answering the door. But humans do. Especially humans stitching together: a few AI paragraphs a few personal observations a few filler lines and a deadline You can feel the seams. You can feel the drift. You can feel the “almost there but not quite” logic. And here’s the deeper thing I’m noticing. This kind of writing...

In Defense of the Em Dash

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  In Defense of the Em Dash C’mon people — it’s not a sign of AI writing The em dash has been doing honest work for centuries. It’s a hinge. A pivot. A breath. A clean break in a noisy world. It’s the writer’s scalpel — the tool you reach for when a comma is too weak and a period is too final. But somewhere along the way, the internet decided the em dash is an “AI tell.” As if Emily Dickinson didn’t build entire universes with it. As if Joan Didion didn’t use it to cut straight to the bone. As if clarity-driven writers haven’t relied on it for decades. The problem isn’t the em dash. The problem is the judgment. People want shortcuts. They want a single punctuation mark that reveals authorship. They want a trick — a cheat code — a quick way to say “this feels machine‑made.” But writing has never worked that way. Style is a system. Rhythm is a fingerprint. Intention is the real signal. The em dash isn’t a giveaway. The  lack of intention  is. And that’s the part critics kee...

My Thoughts on AI Slop

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  My Thoughts on AI Slop I’ve been seeing the phrase “AI slop” everywhere lately. It’s become a kind of shorthand for everything people fear about this moment — that AI will rot our brains, flatten our creativity, and replace every meaningful human skill. I don’t feel that way. I don’t think AI is here to hollow us out. When I hear the term “AI slop,” I think of something much simpler: the quality of the human thinking that goes into the collaboration. AI, to me, is like the most powerful, full‑featured bread machine ever made. It can knead, rise, shape, and bake with incredible precision. It’s fast. It’s consistent. It’s capable of producing wonderful bread. But it can only work with the ingredients it’s given. If the human brings the right proportions — good flour, the right amount of water, a little salt, the proper yeast — the machine does its job beautifully. If the human brings stale flour, no salt, too much water, or no recipe at all, the machine still does its job… but the ...

What I Think About Quality in the Age of AI

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  What I Think About Quality in the Age of AI I’ve been thinking a lot about quality lately — not in a grand philosophical way, just in the practical, everyday sense of what it means to make something worth trusting in this new era of AI. AI has changed the landscape. It really has. It’s democratized technical skill in a way that would’ve been almost impossible before. Things that used to require years of training — coding, design, writing, prototyping — are suddenly accessible to anyone with curiosity and a keyboard. That’s incredible. It opens doors that were locked for a long time. But it also creates a new challenge, at least for me: If the tools are powerful and accessible, then the responsibility shifts to the human to bring quality, taste, and intention to whatever they build. And that’s the part I keep circling back to. I’m not a guru. I’m not laying down rules. I’m just sharing what’s been running through my mind as I build my own projects. AI can generate a lot — fast. Bu...

Finding My Flow in the Age of AI

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  Finding My Flow in the Age of AI I’ve been paying attention lately — not in a grand, analytical way, just in the quiet, personal way you notice patterns when you’re not trying to. And one thing keeps showing up: some people, places, and systems are still operating from a pre‑AI worldview. You can feel it in the way they plan, the way they communicate, the way they hold onto processes that made sense ten years ago but feel heavy now. I’m not judging them. I’m not above them. I’m not offering advice. I’m just noticing. And when I see those struggles, it makes me look inward. It makes me ask myself a simple question:  Am I carrying any of that old worldview forward without realizing it? Because the truth is, AI didn’t just add a new tool to the toolbox. It changed the terrain. It changed the pace. It changed what’s possible, and what’s no longer necessary. And if I want to thrive — creatively, professionally, personally — I have to be honest about how I’m moving through that sh...

Flexibility as a Quiet Superpower

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  Flexibility as a Quiet Superpower Not Advice — Just Something I’ve Noticed I’ve been thinking a lot about flexibility lately. Not the “bend yourself into a pretzel to please everyone” kind. Not the corporate buzzword kind. Just the simple, personal kind — the ability to adjust when life shifts, without losing your center. I’m not a guru. I’m not offering a framework. I’m just sharing something I’ve noticed about myself over the years. Whenever I’ve stayed flexible — in my work, my creative life, my publishing cadence, even my expectations — things have gone better. Not easier, necessarily. Just cleaner. More aligned. More honest. And whenever I’ve dug my heels in, insisting that something  must  go a certain way… that’s when I’ve felt the most stuck. Flexibility Isn’t Weakness — It’s Adaptation For me, flexibility isn’t about being directionless. It’s not about drifting. It’s not about abandoning my values. If anything, it’s the opposite. My values are the anchor. Flexi...