You do not like Artificial Intelligence. Or you have never tried it.
That is fine. It is perfectly normal.
The truth is, most people avoid AI not because they lack ability, but because of a silent anxiety about the unknown.
Avoiding the technology at first feels harmless because the way you work today still gets the job done, and the comfort of postponing change creates a false sense of security.
There is also a familiar fear of losing the human touch, or a mental block against dealing with a black box that feels too complex to understand.
But the world did not pause for your opinion.
It moved.
Quietly.
The problem with delaying is that while you wait, your manual effort and inefficiency slowly pile up.
While you were deciding if it was worth it, or waiting to understand everything perfectly before taking the first step, others were learning faster, building quicker, and multiplying their output.
Not because they are better than you.
Not because they are tech geniuses.
They moved sooner.
And the tools themselves are simpler than many people imagine. Most modern AI tools require no programming knowledge at all.
The data is already clear: AI is helping people close gaps faster, delegate repetitive tasks, and boost productivity in meaningful ways.
This is not really about liking AI.
It is about understanding where things are going.
AI is not some uncontrollable entity. It is a tool.
Like any tool, it becomes useful when you know where it fits and when to use it.
You still give the instructions. You still set the boundaries. You still hold the standard.
You can ignore all of this.
People ignored the internet too. People ignored smartphones.
People always ignore the shift until the shift ignores them back.
What are you waiting for?