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How I Write With AI

Work

My process is simple. I record what I feel, what I experienced, personal raw moments, what I believe, and what I’ve learned - straight, no filter. Voice first, not text. Talking captures the truth that typing edits out.

Then I hand it to AI. It gives me a draft. Not polished. Not fake. Just structured, a mirror of my thoughts, not a replacement.

The next part feels like having a conversation with a coach, a mentor, and sometimes a therapist. The AI asks questions - the kind that make you stop and think. It doesn’t flatter me; it challenges me. It asks why I believe something, where it came from, and how I know it’s true.

I answer everything out loud again - no script, no filter. Just honesty.

Then AI gives me another draft. It’s cleaner, sharper, and closer to what I actually meant to say, not what I thought sounded good.

Finally, I go through what AI gave me, line by line. I remove anything that feels artificial or not mine. I keep what carries weight. My voice, my experience, my lived moments, that’s the part no system can fake.

AI helps me structure, but the meaning is all me.

That’s how I write, human first, AI second. I use AI as a mirror, not a ghostwriter. I feed it my raw voice and tell it to sharpen, not replace. I strip out the fake polish, cut jargon, and add back the edges. I don’t want “content.” I want my thoughts, sharpened.

The secret isn’t the tool. It’s how you enter the conversation. Raw > generic every time. That’s why my words still feel human. Because they start human.

Here’s how it looks in practice:

  1. Talk it out loud, messy and unfiltered.

  2. Drop into AI for structure, not polish.

  3. Cut fake shine, keep the real parts.

  4. Rewrite anything that feels wrong in plain words.

  5. Add back my tone - blunt, raw, human.

  6. Proof once. Publish fast.

That’s it. Simple, honest, human.

Blessed.