Human vs. AI: The Battle of Words

During college, I was assigned to write a lot of things and complete many tasks while keeping them up to the teachers’ satisfaction. It was the beginning of ChatGPT. It wasn’t fully developed yet, but it could get the job done.

I decided to purchase ChatGPT Plus to help generate ideas and resolve grammatical issues in my essays and assignments more quickly. While I was working in construction, I used Generative Design to create numerous designs and ideas in the blink of an eye. I was familiar with AI, and I decided to use it to save more time and focus on the things that actually needed my attention.

After two years, I graduated and decided to learn more about the power of AI. I was exposed to different tools such as Deepseek, Claude, Notion AI, Arc Browser, Grok, and many others. It’s amazing to get results much faster than doing it yourself. You can ask about any subject and receive answers at record speed.

In the fall of 2024, I began writing fictional stories. I came up with the ideas myself and used AI tools to fix grammatical and punctuation errors. I noticed an interesting difference between writing done by humans and writing done by AI.

When I write on my own, I put my full attention into it. Sometimes I write on paper first and then type it out on my laptop. When I needed to expand a word into a sentence, I was tired and out of ideas. So, I asked ChatGPT to help. It did an amazing job, and I copied and pasted it into the story.

The next day, I started reading the story from beginning to end. There was a major difference between that paragraph and the others. I read it a couple of times and found the difference: the part I wrote myself had the energy of a human being, while the part written by AI didn’t.

If you remember, around 20 years ago, when email and messaging weren’t part of everyone’s lives, people used to send letters to each other. I used to write them myself. That process made you pay attention and focus on the paper, but nowadays, that is fading away.

I’m not downgrading technology. It’s great to have tools and resources that help get things done faster and more cheaply. If someone isn’t great at writing, using AI can help with writing cover letters for job applications, composing emails to universities, or even clarifying an email or message from someone.

What I highly recommend is that when you ask AI to write something for you, read it and pay attention to it. If you don’t like a part of it, ask the tools you are using to change it for you. You can suggest changes that you think better fit the message you are writing and also align with your writing style.

Reread it a few times and stay focused on it. This way, you will put your attention into it, and the person reading your text will sense the human energy in it. Most people won’t consciously notice it, but they will pick up on it subconsciously.

People will notice the difference between AI-written text and human-written text. The reason behind this is that we are broadcasters and receivers of frequencies. We get the author’s energy and intention even if they are not present in the room. In simpler terms, the author is broadcasting the frequencies and we are receiving them.

That’s why, when someone is staring at you—even from behind—you turn around and look at them. Another example is how parents sometimes have an intuition, often referred to as a ‘sixth sense,’ that their children are doing something they shouldn’t.

If you decide to give it a try, please send me your stories and articles. I would love to read them and learn about your thoughts while writing an article, as well as your imagination while crafting a story, while infusing your intention and energy into it.

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