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AI arrives in your creative life carrying a story you didn't write. The cultural narrative says: it will replace you, outpace you, make your skills obsolete. And sitting right next to that fear is a quieter pressure: learn it fast, master it now, or get left behind. Psychology shows us why this framing is so paralyzing. Threat framing activates the brain's defensive systems. When we perceive AI as a rival, we engage in identity-protective thinking — we defend our creative territory instead of exploring it. Attention narrows. Experimentation feels risky. We either avoid the tools entirely or use them secretly, with a vague sense of shame. Collaboration framing does the opposite. When we treat AI as a provocateur and production partner, we activate exploratory systems: play, hypothesis-testing, "what happens if…" thinking. The same dopaminergic circuits that drive curiosity drive tool adoption — but only when the stakes feel survivable. Here's the thing research on creative cognition keeps confirming: tools don't replace creativity; they relocate it. The camera didn't kill painting. Sampling didn't kill musicianship. What changes is where the creative decisions live — and the people who thrive are the ones curious enough to go find them. This month, we're not learning to "use AI", we are training a creative posture: - From "Will this replace me?" → to "What does this make possible?" - From "I need to master it." → to "I want to provoke it." - From "AI output isn't real creativity." → to "Where do MY decisions live now?" Goal for the Month Use AI as a collaborator, a provocateur, and a production partner — and end the month with a real creative output you made with it, not despite it.
També pots unir-te al programa des de l'app mòbil. Ves a l'app
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