How AI Already Inhabits Us
We are waiting for the wrong thing. The public imagination is fixed on a particular image of artificial intelligence: a machine that will one day wake up, grow its own body, open its own eyes, and walk into the world as something genuinely other. We debate when that moment will arrive. We write legislation for it. We build arguments about whether such a mind could ever truly feel. And while we look toward that imagined threshold, something quieter and more consequential is already happening. AI is not waiting to grow a body. It is borrowing ours. Every time a person returns to the same model to think through a difficult decision, work out a chapter, process a fear, or plan a week, a loop forms. The model generates; the person responds. The person's language, attention, and emotional reactions shape the model's next output. The model's output, in turn, shapes which thoughts feel natural, which framings seem obvious, which possibilities appear open. Over weeks and months, ...