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Why I Worry AI Killing The Magic In Our Moments

Why I Worry - AI Killing The Magic In Our Moments

Why I Worry - AI Killing The Magic In Our Moments

AI Killing The Magic: A few weeks ago, I went to my friend Maya’s wedding. Everything was beautiful — the music, the laughter, the smell of flowers in the air. But the best part, at least for me, was her husband’s speech. It was funny, touching, and perfectly timed. He even managed to make the whole crowd tear up — and then laugh again two minutes later.

As I clapped along with everyone else, a tiny thought slipped into my head, one I wish hadn’t.
Did he write that himself?
Or was this another moment made a little too perfect by artificial intelligence?

I didn’t want to seem rude, but curiosity got the better of me. Later that night, I asked him quietly, “That speech was amazing. Did you… Maybe get a little help from ChatGPT?”

He laughed — apparently, I was the fifth person to ask. “Nope,” he said. “Every word was mine.” I believed him. But the fact that I’d even wondered took something away from the experience. That moment of magic — the feeling that we were hearing something straight from someone’s heart — had been quietly replaced by doubt.

And that’s what worries me.

Because now, whenever I hear a clever stand-up routine, a touching song lyric, or even read a heartfelt post online, a small question sits at the back of my mind: Was this written by a person — or by a program?

Even if the words move me, even if the jokes make me laugh, I can’t stop wondering. And that wondering dulls the feeling.


The Disappearing Wonder

AI Killing The Magic – pondering AI’s role in creativity, representing the disappearing wonder of human originality

AI is making it easier than ever to sound smart, poetic, or funny. You can ask a chatbot to write a wedding speech, a love letter, or even a novel — and it’ll do it in seconds. That’s impressive, sure. But it also makes genuine creativity harder to recognize.

There’s a kind of quiet beauty in struggling to find the right word, in scribbling and deleting and starting again. That messy process — that effort — is what makes human creativity so alive.

When a machine skips straight to the perfect version, something essential gets lost.


What the Tech World Doesn’t Get

AI Killing The Magic – reflecting on AI’s impact on creativity

Some tech leaders say creativity isn’t magic at all. They claim that every song, poem, or story is just a remix of what’s come before — a clever reordering of data. And maybe that’s true in a technical sense. But it misses the point entirely.

When a child writes their first song, when a poet finds the perfect line at 3 a.m., or when an artist paints something that makes a stranger cry — something is happening there that can’t be measured. Something mysterious. Something human.

It’s not about the outcome; it’s about the experience of creating.


The Joy of Making, Not Just Consuming

Musician enjoying creative process — highlighting joy of making art in AI era

A few months ago, I started learning to play the piano. I’m terrible at it. My fingers stumble, I hit the wrong notes, and my dog leaves the room every time I practice. But when I finally manage to play a simple song, the happiness I feel is real and earned.

If I asked AI to compose a song for me, it would sound better. But it wouldn’t feel better.

Because the joy doesn’t come from perfection — it comes from the process. From trying. From failing. Finally getting it right after the tenth attempt.

That’s what technology can never replicate.


Keeping the Human Spark Alive

AI Killing The Magic – Team of creators working together to preserve human creativity — keeping the spark alive in digital age

AI isn’t evil. It can help us learn, create, and solve huge problems. But we should be careful not to let it steal the small, human moments that give life meaning — the handmade, heartfelt, slightly imperfect things that remind us of who we are.

The world doesn’t need everything to be flawless. It needs things that are real.

So yes, I’ll keep using AI when I need to — but I’ll also keep writing my own messy sentences, playing my clumsy chords, and saying words straight from my heart.

Because that’s where the real magic lives.

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