Somewhere between the thud of the first Macintosh commercial and the day your fridge started asking for your Wi-Fi password, we developed a peculiar kink in our collective confidence.
Human instinct -- the kind forged in the furnace of 30 years
pitching ideas, breaking ideas, rebuilding ideas out of caffeine and ego and
last-minute panic -- suddenly became the red-haired stepchild of the decision
room.
Gut feeling? Experience? Intuition?
Cute. Nostalgic. Like vinyl or hand-written thank you notes.
Lovely to romanticize. Hard to expense.
Now the magic words are: “The model recommends.” And
everyone nods like they’re at a wine tasting and know what “hints of gooseberry
and attractive saddle leather notes” means.
We’ve gone from “show me the justifiation” to “well, the black box burped so I guess we pivot.” We treat the algorithm like some sleek digital oracle … cold, hard, algorithmic truth … while conveniently forgetting it’s trained on… us. Our thinking. Our patterns. Our triumphs. Our flops. Our messy, inconsistent, human sausage-making of ideas. Even though it's just our instincts, blended, baked, pressurized, and served back to us in a stainless-steel voice.
But here's the psychological plot twist nobody wants to
admit: We don’t trust AI because it's smarter. We trust AI because it's not
us.
There’s relief in outsourcing doubt. There’s comfort in
handing the wheel to something that can’t blush, stammer, or have a
Sunday-night existential crisis about whether Gretchen in finance secretly
hates your brainstorming energy.
If the machine's wrong? Well, that’s engineering’s problem. If
you’re wrong, that’s… you. Your reputation. Your gut. Your call.
And maybe that's the real fear.
AI didn’t take our jobs, insecurity did. We didn't hand
power to the algorithm, we evacuated it from our own bellies.
So here's a rebellious thought to leave rattling around your
decision-making cortex:
Ask the machine. Ask it, poke it, prod it, use it like the fantastically strange tool it is.
But don’t exile the organ that got humanity through sabertooths, stock markets, and the dark age of 56k dial-up modems.
Your intuition has a resume too. And unlike ChatGPT, it can
smell fear. And fire. And a client about to say, “We’re going in another direction.”
AI is a co-pilot. Not the head honcho.
Trust the algorithm. But trust your gut more … it’s got emotional connection and better stories earned through triumph, trauma, and resiliency.