Creativity is something that flows naturally when we try to create, improve, and express. Whether it’s writing an article, painting, crafting from waste, or building a school project—every step involves thinking, imagining, and refining.
These activities don’t just produce results; they sharpen our vocabulary, boost imagination, and strengthen concentration.
From drafting letters to editing photos, making videos, or researching a topic—we once invested time and effort, and in return, we learned deeply.
Now, AI has changed the pace. With a simple command, ideas, articles, designs, and even videos appear within seconds. It feels efficient, even impressive. But beneath this convenience lies a subtle concern.
Are we replacing effort with ease?
Are we choosing speed over skill?
If overused, AI may slowly reduce our habit of thinking, questioning, and creating on our own. Future generations might depend more on ready-made solutions than their own imagination and reasoning.
AI is powerful but creativity is personal.
The real question is not whether AI is harmful, but how we choose to use it.
Are we using AI, or is it quietly replacing us?
MBH/PS