The Human Side of Artificial Intelligence
There is something quietly fascinating happening in modern culture right now.
Artificial intelligence is evolving rapidly toward more natural communication. AI can now mimic emotional tone, personalize interactions, recognize patterns in behavior, and communicate in ways that feel increasingly conversational and human.
At the same time, many humans are being conditioned toward the opposite.
Faster output.
Constant optimization.
Performance metrics.
Reduced downtime.
Continuous availability.
Transactional communication.
Emotional suppression in the name of productivity.
In many professional environments, people are increasingly rewarded for functioning more like systems.
And somewhere inside that shift, something important may be getting lost.
For years, society has focused heavily on technological advancement — and understandably so. Innovation has transformed healthcare, communication, research, education, logistics, marketing, and nearly every major industry. AI has the potential to improve efficiency, reduce repetitive tasks, streamline operations, and support entirely new levels of innovation.
I appreciate these advancements deeply.
I use AI tools myself and work within a major AI leader and consult in the space, so I recognize the extraordinary opportunities these technologies create for business growth, research, communication, organization, innovation, and creative support.
But I also believe there is an important conversation emerging beneath the surface of all this innovation:
What happens if humans become so focused on efficiency that we slowly disconnect from the very qualities that make us uniquely human?
Because while AI can process massive amounts of information at extraordinary speed, human intelligence still carries dimensions that remain far more difficult to replicate:
Intuition.
Presence.
Discernment.
Empathy.
Self-awareness.
Emotional resonance.
Lived experience.
Ethical reasoning.
Meaning-making.
These are not simply “soft skills.”
They are part of the deeper architecture of human intelligence.
Research continues to show that emotional intelligence and psychological well-being remain strongly tied to leadership effectiveness, trust, adaptability, communication, and organizational health (Goleman, 1998; Harvard Business Review, 2004).
At the same time, organizations and researchers continue raising concerns about chronic workplace stress, burnout, emotional fatigue, and disconnection in increasingly performance-driven environments (Deloitte, 2023).
Yet modern culture increasingly pushes many people toward overstimulation, emotional exhaustion, nervous system overload, and disconnection from themselves.
Many individuals are functioning at high levels externally while internally feeling mentally depleted, emotionally disconnected, or unable to fully slow down.
And perhaps that is part of the paradox we are now facing:
As machines become more conversational, humans are struggling to feel genuinely connected.
As technology becomes more personalized, many people feel increasingly unseen.
As AI learns emotional language, humans are becoming more emotionally exhausted.
This is not an argument against AI.
It is an argument for remembering ourselves while building it.
The future likely does not belong to humans competing against artificial intelligence. It belongs to humans learning how to integrate technology wisely without abandoning emotional awareness, intuitive intelligence, discernment, ethics, and human connection in the process.
Technology can support humanity beautifully.
But it should not replace our relationship with ourselves.
As innovation accelerates, perhaps the opportunity is not choosing between technological intelligence and human intelligence — but learning how to integrate both more consciously, ethically, and intelligently alongside one another.
Perhaps the deeper challenge ahead is not whether AI becomes more intelligent.
Perhaps the greater challenge is whether humans remain emotionally conscious enough to use it responsibly.
That may ultimately determine the kind of future we create.
“As some of the biggest players in AI continue accelerating innovation, perhaps the deeper question is whether humanity is evolving just as consciously, ethically, and intelligently alongside it.” — Michelle Berns
With innovation accelerating rapidly among some of the biggest players in AI, what role do you believe human consciousness, ethics, and emotional intelligence should play in shaping the future alongside it?
If this resonates, you can learn more about THE ALIGNED RESET™ at TheAlignedReset.com.
References
Deloitte. (2023). 2023 Global Human Capital Trends. Deloitte Insights. https://www2.deloitte.com/us/en/insights/focus/human-capital-trends.html
Goleman, D. (1998). Working with emotional intelligence. Bantam Books.
Harvard Business Review. (2004, January). What makes a leader? https://hbr.org/2004/01/what-makes-a-leader
Harvard Business Review. (2019, June 12). How leaders build trust. https://hbr.org/2019/06/how-leaders-build-trust