After some time in recovery, a new sense of understanding develops. Most of our feelings were buried, and buried deep. Such unwitting denial of our resentments stems from the conditioning of our addiction. Perhaps we talked ourselves into believing that we weren't so sick after all. There we sat with our Fourth Step in front of us, thinking and thinking, finally deciding that we just didn't have any resentments. ![]() Many of us had trouble identifying our resentments when we were new in recovery. "We want to look our past in the face, see it for what it really was, and release it so we can live today." #comments #linkedin #personalbranding #bestadvice Ring the bell on my profile (□) to be notified of new posts. Follow my hashtag: #CraigNotes (279 followers)ģ. ✅ Sharing advice on how to leave LinkedIn comments for people who want to stand out.ġ. ✅ I help content creators on LinkedIn by leaving value-driven comments. Want to help? Focus on what you can recap.Ĭomments you and I see: "This is a great."ġ. Want to help? Focus on what you can share. Want to help? Focus on what you can add to the post. Having trouble? Start every comment with a quote.Ĭomments you and I see: "Thank you for sharing." Having trouble? Start every comment with a question. Having trouble? Start every comment with an observation. #AI #AIContent #Marketing #Contentmarketing #PlagiarismĬomments you and I see all the time: "Great post". Yes, AI content rewords/paraphrases already available info, so where do we draw the line? I cannot expect the client to do the hw and actually *read* and exclaim, "hey, no, it is detecting common words too! The fault is in their stars!"Īs I write this post, I'm thinking about the subtle difference between plagiarism + AI content. When you submit them, they will only say, "oh AI tool says it's 27% AI-written, it must be a horrible article." So what's the use case of them anyway?Ĭlients want reports. And, most of these tools detect common words/phrases. □ Areas that are genuinely plagged go undetected. Of course, its content is not publishable, but can't deny/ignore. □ Does AI/ChatGPT-generated content means it's bad/not usable? I'm a bit dicey about "believing" such reports because: I tried a lot of tools, and more or less, they gave me the same results. I AB tested my article and it was shocking because the portions I actually pulled from ChatGPT went undetected. This incident made me question: How accurate is an AI detector? □ ![]() It's only with time my reliance on them faded. Thinking of them as the epitome of content's authenticity. I remember when I first interacted with such tools, how *blindly* I would believe Grammarly's & Copyscape's reports. □Flesch-Kincaid Readability report and OMG, what not!!! I ran an article on an AI-detector tool I was editing & was shocked to see such polarizing results:Īs an editor, I have to check many reports: To believe or not believe, that is the question □ But don’t feel unhinged if you feel sad or bittersweet right now. I think something exceptional is going to come from all this. For a lot of writers, our ability to make meaning is wrapped up in our identity and is the only usefulness we’ve been able to find in decades of searching for ourselves.Īnd now we’re trying to carry on in a world that sees our ability to make meaning as secondary, or at least little more than an outcome of clicks and grammatical correctness. The process of making meaning - putting ideas to form and connecting with others through everything that goes into the creation of a work - alleviates our suffering in some weird and perhaps unnameable way. The sweep of technology-replacing-thought (which I think is different than the 1980s technology-replacing-tool) is incredibly demoralizing for creatives and writers in particular. It goes on to quote Nietzsche’s “he who has a why to live for can bear almost any how.” “Meaning making… is the heart of humanity, it gives us the power to transcend suffering.” It’s a quote from Susan Caine’s book, “Bittersweet.” If you’ve been wondering why all the AI chatter makes you feel sad, I think I found out why.
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