Posts

My Thoughts on AI Slop

Image
  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

Image
  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

Image
  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

Image
  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...

The Quiet Power of Creating Without an Agenda

Image
  The Quiet Power of Creating Without an Agenda I’ve been noticing something about my own creative life lately. Whenever I sit down to make something with a goal attached — grow this, convert that, optimize the other — the work gets heavier. The joy thins out. The whole thing starts feeling like a performance instead of a practice. And I’m not a guru here. I’m not teaching anything. I’m just describing what I’ve been feeling for a while. Creating From Curiosity, Not Conversion There’s a different energy that shows up when I create without trying to steer anyone anywhere. It’s lighter. Cleaner. More honest. I’m not calculating the downstream effect of every sentence. I’m not trying to impress or persuade. I’m just following an idea because it has a pulse. Most of the modern internet pushes creators toward outcomes — traction, monetization, scale. I’ve followed that current at times. But when those goals sit in the front seat, I can feel something subtle slipping away. Curiosity shri...

What Happens When You Remove the Sales Funnel?

Image
  What Happens When You Remove the Sales Funnel? There’s a quiet relief that enters the room when you stop treating people like potential customers. The air changes. The posture changes. The whole interaction shifts from extraction to presence. Most of the internet is built on the opposite assumption: that if you don’t guide someone toward a transaction, you’re wasting the moment. But what if the moment is the point? What if the value of an interaction isn’t measured by what it produces, but by what it preserves — clarity, curiosity, trust, ease? When you remove the funnel, a few things happen almost immediately: 1. People stop bracing. They’re no longer waiting for the pitch behind the kindness. They can actually hear you. 2. The conversation becomes real. Not strategic. Not optimized. Just two humans exchanging ideas without a hidden agenda. 3. Your work becomes cleaner. You’re no longer designing for conversion. You’re designing for comprehension, resonance, and usefulness. 4. Y...

Tired of Sales Funnels? So Am I

Image
  Tired of Sales Funnels? So Am I There’s a particular kind of fatigue that settles in when every corner of the modern web starts to feel like a checkout line. You click a link, open an app, join a community, read a post — and suddenly you’re not a person anymore. You’re a “lead.” A “conversion opportunity.” A warm body being nudged down a funnel someone diagrammed in a slide deck. It’s exhausting. Not because commerce is bad. Not because people shouldn’t build things and get paid for them. But because somewhere along the way, the human layer got stripped out. Curiosity became a metric. Community became a tactic. Even kindness started to feel like a prelude to an upsell. And the worst part is how subtle it all is. You can feel the shift the moment it happens: The tone changes. The warmth becomes strategic. The “welcome” starts sounding like onboarding copy. The “community” starts sounding like a CRM segment. You’re no longer in a conversation. You’re in a pipeline. I don’t think an...