• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • Top Menu Social Icons

    • Email
    • Instagram
    • LinkedIn
    • Substack
    • Threads
Malik Writes

Malik Writes

Malik Gonzalez's personal blog and portfolio, where storytelling meets brand clarity, empowering creators and small businesses through thoughtful marketing.

  • Home

How I Was Using AI Wrong (And Maybe You Are Too)

March 1, 2026 by Malik

What’s more important? To sound like you or the version of you that you think people want to see?

This is an age old question if you think about it. We’ve always had to choose this. For example, when you want to impress a girl do you think “let me be 100% me” or do you think, “ok let me show parts of me I think she’ll like and slowly show the others.” For the ladies, knowing where you’re going or what type of guy you’re going to meet dictates which outfit and look you put on. And by look I mean wearing heavy makeup, jewelry, etc., or subtle makeup, little to no jewelry, etc.

Now I know what you’re thinking, “ok what does this have to do with anything?” Let me bring it full circle, how many of us use AI so our writing, words, scripts, etc. sound and look good for the audience? I’ll be honest and say I did this with good intentions. I have a college degree and I enjoy writing. In my brain that meant I need to look and sound a certain way. I wanted to portray myself as an educated writer, forgetting that my voice and how I think is more important than how I “should” sound.

But now the why. Why I used AI for my writing. I justified it with, “I wrote everything myself, it’s just finessing it to the way I would ideally like to write and sound.” And is that wrong? To want to write and sound in a way that isn’t natural to me? And is it wrong to use a tool to help me achieve that? I don’t know.

There’s something similar people do but aren’t up in arms about like they are with AI. Photography. I’ve been a photographer for about 13 years. The reason I picked it up was because I can’t draw and I wanted to create art, so this was the next best thing. And this is common, if you ask a photographer why they started, a majority will say because they couldn’t draw and wanted to make art.

What I’m about to say is an unpopular opinion, and again this is coming from someone who did photography for 13 years, photography isn’t truly all that difficult. You learn about lighting, exposure, f-stop, and ISO. After that you push a button and the camera does the rest of the work. Now if you’re a photographer I know what you’re thinking, “But Malik, I have to learn lighting, composition, how to arrange the subject, etc.” Yes, but so does a painter. They have to arrange their subjects, compose the shot, and see where the lighting is coming from, except they take hours to create an image while photography does the work with the push of a button. Why is it ok for photographers to have a camera do the majority of the work but a writer can’t use AI to shape and refine a piece they wrote?

I think here’s the line and what we can do about it. To remember to use it as a tool. And I know everyone preaches this but doesn’t explain it, so here is my best take. Write the piece yourself first and then put it into AI to make it sound how you want. I think that’s fair. It’s using it as a tool. Telling AI to write you a piece about storytelling and then copying, pasting, and posting it is what most people have an issue with. It’s the equivalent of buying a microwave dinner, nuking it, and then saying this is a dish I put together. Using it as a tool is you gathering the ingredients and using the stove and pans to put it together. That’s using the kitchen tools. So similarly goes with your writing. Write the thing yourself at least and have AI put it in a voice you want.

But the real cheat code, as the kiddos say, is writing it the way you think and speak and just letting that out. That’s what most people truly want nowadays. It’s the equivalent of watching a guy on the street improvising with his guitar as opposed to a pianist playing Mozart perfectly. Yes it’s good, but playing the notes too perfectly is soulless. That’s why we love the raspy voices with character and texture in them. You writing and telling your stories from the dome to the page will speak more volumes than feeding your thoughts to the machine and it spitting out something that doesn’t sound like you.

As for me and what I’m doing now to avoid this. I’m still using Claude, which I think is currently the best AI when it comes to writing, to check my grammar, punctuation, and spelling. And I ask it for suggestions on how to make my writing better. But I’m reading more books on writing. I have The Well Spoken Thesaurus to help me learn and use better words, to get me to the point where I can grow my writing and still sound like 100% me.

Here’s a link to the books I’ve read and currently reading about writing if you want to work on your writing with me. This is an affiliate link.

My reading list

Filed Under: writing

← Previous Post
I Had to Lower My Reading Goal to Enjoy Reading Again
Next Post →
The Free Tool I Use to Format and Preview Every LinkedIn Post Before I Hit Publish

You may also like

The Free Tool I Use to Format and Preview Every LinkedIn Post Before I Hit Publish
Don’t write for an imaginary audience before writing for yourself
I Was Paralyzed by the Blank Page… Until a Friend Showed Me a Way Forward

Primary Sidebar

About Meh

This is where I think out loud.

I’m Malik. Writer, designer, and chronic dot connector. I write about storytelling, personal branding, creative work, and occasionally whatever I’ve just become obsessed with.

The throughline is always the same though. The story beneath the surface.

Pull up a chair with your matcha.

Instagram

maliktells

I was using AI to make my writing sound like the v I was using AI to make my writing sound like the version of me I thought people wanted to see.

And I told myself it was fine because I wrote it first.

But then I started thinking about photographers. Nobody complains when a camera does the heavy lifting. 

So why are we so up in arms about writers using AI?

There's a line though. And once I figured out where it was, it changed how I write completely.

New blog post is up. Link in bio.
I'm on my "artist date" where I'm out solo to cont I'm on my "artist date" where I'm out solo to continue building a relationship with my "artist self."

I haven't been feeling like an artist for a few months now. I've been on survival mode focusing on business and stopped having fun with the work I do.

This morning I thought back to Julia Cameron’s The Artist’s Way where she says to go on a once a week solo expedition to do something that fires up your imagination or simply brings you joy.

For me today is being at one of my favorite coffee shops @sweettweetsbakeryep and have my iced vanilla matcha, portable keyboard and iPad to write for my Substack.

It feels good showing up the version of me I want to be today. Which btw if you want to take a peek at my writing, check out my Substack, link is in bio.

If you were to be your artist self for the week, who would you show up as?
I had to lower my reading goal to actually enjoy r I had to lower my reading goal to actually enjoy reading again.

I went from skimming books just to hit a number, to actually loving the process again by setting the bar "stupid low."

​Turns out, when you stop trying to prove you read, you actually read more.

​Full breakdown of the strategy on Substack today. Link in bio! 

​#reading #books #mindset #Substack
I stopped trying to write for an imaginary audienc I stopped trying to write for an imaginary audience.

And my work finally started sounding like me.

Write for yourself first.

The audience comes later.

Read the full post on my Substack. Link in bio.
This arctic freeze was cold. I live in a studio ap This arctic freeze was cold. I live in a studio apartment, and my little heater did what it could.

I bought a few books, picturing myself warm and cozy with hot tea. That didn’t happen. I ended up writing.

I started watching a non-fiction writing course I bought, and one of the exercises sparked something. I thought, I want to post this somewhere.

I started on Instagram. I wrote about my time in New York back in 2019, practicing present tense. I did it a little too well, people thought I was there when I posted it.

Then I rewrote a longer version and realized it was too long. Too long for Threads. Already on Instagram. Not right for LinkedIn. I didn’t want to start a blog.

A friend suggested Substack. I couldn’t believe I didn’t think of it sooner. I started one two years ago and never used it. Now I finally have a place for my writing, my thoughts, and the things I’m interested in.

I went from planning to finish a book to starting a Substack.

If you’re curious about what I wrote while filming this, the link is in my bio.
This saturday (Jan/31st) grab your favorite book, This saturday (Jan/31st) grab your favorite book, get a warm cup of coffee (or matcha lol) and catch up on the book you've been working on.

We'll be reading from 10 to 11 and then from 11 to 12 we'll be mingling and joining @borderartistsociety in junk journaling!

We'll be at @alienbrew830 located at 486 Concho St

DM if you have any questions.

See y'all this Saturday!
Follow on Instagram

Footer

Check Out Our Substack

Wisdom Debt

Stay in Touch

Be the first to hear about our new post and get exclusive content.

  • Email
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • Substack
  • Threads

Copyright © 2026 ·Private Policy

Marley Theme by Code + Coconut