Exit Lab #2: Writing with AI (but actually writing)

Laptop and notebook on desk, illustrating how to write better with AI using both technology and human input.

AI can write fast.
But most of what it writes feels empty.

I think that’s creating a strange illusion right now.

Because text shows up on the screen, it’s easy to believe the hard part is done.
That writing has somehow become easy.

But typing words was never the skill.

The skill is knowing what to say.
Why it matters.
How to shape it so someone actually feels something when they read it.

That hasn’t changed.

If anything, it matters more now.


So this is what I’m exploring next.

Exit Lab #2: writing an e-book about using AI for writing.

Not how to generate more text.
Not how to write better prompts.

But how to take what AI gives you — and turn it into something worth reading.

Because the difference isn’t in the tool.

It’s in the thinking behind it.
The editing.
The intention.

The parts AI can’t do for you.


This isn’t theory.

It’s meant to be used — something you can sit down with, apply, and actually see the difference in your own writing.


The goal is simple:

After reading it, you should be able to sit down with AI —
and actually write better.


Because we’re not competing on access anymore.
We’re competing on depth.

Anyone can generate text now.
Very few can make it worth reading.


I’ll be building this in real time.
Sharing what works, what doesn’t, and what actually makes a difference.

This is part of it: Press publish to exit.

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