Why I'm NOT Afraid of AI:
A Senior Citizen's Perspective
AI: Useful or Risky?
Three years ago, when ChatGPT was
launched, friends began forwarding alarming messages. AI would take away jobs.
AI would write books. AI would become smarter than humans. Some even predicted
the end of civilisation.
Curious rather than fearful, I began
experimenting with AI. Since then, I have spent hundreds of hours chatting with
ChatGPT, Gemini, Copilot and other tools. The more I use AI, the less afraid of
it I become. Familiarity has replaced fear; experience has replaced
speculation.
Recently, a senior colleague asked,
“Do you find AI useful? Isn’t it risky to use AI at our age?”
A few months ago, I had made a
presentation on ‘AI for Senior Citizens.’ Much impressed, some of the attendees
concluded that I was an AI expert—which I’m not. But I taught myself to use
ChatGPT soon after its launch and gradually became acquainted with several
other AI tools, some of which I now use regularly.
Vermont Book Club
No, AI has not cheated me, misled me,
or exposed me to the risk of hacking or cyber fraud. In fact, it has saved me
from one.
In April 2026, I received an email
from Jasmine of Vermont Book Club inviting me to join a ‘Spotlight Session’
focussing on my books. She had even written a succinct, sparkling review which
showed her familiarity with many, if not all, of my published books.
Where is Vermont, and why is VBC
interested in my books? I wondered.
Anyway, I sent a polite reply
soliciting more details. As an afterthought, I consulted ChatGPT which
instantly raised a red flag.
“Be cautious, it looks like a scam to
me. Jasmine’s brief review of your books is possibly AI-generated. VBC may next
demand a processing fee from you.”
As predicted by AI, Jasmine’s reply
came soon enough:
“Your session would be virtual, for an
hour, and could you please deposit USD 110.00 towards processing fee?”
“Sorry, Jasmine. I don’t pay to join a
session. But I’d be glad to make a presentation. I charge USD 500 per hour.”
Thanks, AI, for your timely alert.
AI Architect
For renovation of my father’s house at
Sambalpur, I engaged a petty contractor who suggested Simpolo for the
flooring—a tiles brand I hadn’t heard of. I also wished to cross-check the
quantities and estimates for material and labour.
Can you please help? I asked ChatGPT.
“Sure, just share the basic details.”
I uploaded a sketch of the floor plan
of the house with measurements, and the contractor’s estimates scribbled on a
piece of paper.
ChatGPT floored me.
It recommended room-wise tile size,
colour, estimate for premium, medium and basic quality, and prevalent rates for
tiles and labour charges.
“Do you need the names of major tile
dealers in Sambalpur, and their contact numbers?” it asked.
“And yes, the contractor’s estimate
for quantities is inflated by about twenty percent!”
“Here is a Print-Ready sheet which you
may use for your further discussion and negotiation with the contractor and the
tile dealers.”
Why I’m NOT afraid of AI?
I can offer many reasons—all based on
my experience of using AI over the last three years.
AI is a Tool, not my Master
Automobiles are useful. I drive my
car, but haven’t forgotten how to walk. I’ve travelled on ships and boats, but
haven’t quit swimming.
Decades ago, I used a Casio
calculator, and now have one in my phone. But when buying vegetables, I still
resort to mental math which is faster.
Happy with my Brain, no Need to Augment it with AI
I don’t intend to augment my brain by
implanting AI chips; Singularity may be near, but FAR from me.
I don’t intend to upload my brain to
the cloud. I don’t have the money, and there’s nothing special about it anyway.
I am a Pensioner; AI can’t Sack Me
AI cannot sack me. It cannot replace
me in a profession because I no longer have one. My pension is credited to my
bank account, and AI can’t stop that. Only the government can.
More seriously, AI may indeed
eliminate many jobs. Young entrants to the workforce and those performing
highly routine tasks may face greater disruption.*
I’m the Writer; AI is an Assistant
AI helps me in finding information,
summarising articles, and generating reading lists. Sometimes, it tempts me.
“Shall I provide a draft of 1,000
words for your proposed piece?”
“Thanks, but no. I’ll write my own
piece.”
I’m the writer; AI is my able
assistant.
I Own my Body
AI has many helpful suggestions for my
health and wellbeing. Walk daily, practise yoga, pranayama and meditation,
strength training on alternate days, eat a balanced diet, shun sugar and
processed food, reduce salt, oil and starch.
But I do the walking, yoga and
strength training; I eat the balanced diet. AI is my guide and motivator, but
I’m the actor.
AI may encourage me to walk, but only
I can walk.
I Trust Doctors more than Chatbots
My annual pathological report for
preventive care came in a PDF which I uploaded on ChatGPT. In less than a
minute, it gave me a detailed analysis of each parameter in my report, flagged
the areas of concern, proposed a few easy-to-adopt lifestyle changes, and
suggested further guidance from my physician.
I sent the PDF to my physician who
corroborated AI’s analysis and recommendations, though in fewer words.
When my physician prescribes any new
medicine, I ask AI for the pros and cons of the prescribed medication. I still
follow my physician’s prescription, but with greater awareness.
Creativity comes from Lived Experience
I was born in Khuntpali, a small
village near Bargarh in western Odisha, and lived there for the first eleven
years of my life. I did a whole lot of things which AI can never do. Not its
fault, though, for it was not yet born.
AI never climbed a mango tree nor was
it forced to beat a hasty retreat owing to the army of red ants fiercely
guarding their nests which happened to be near the ripe mangoes.
AI never fell from a guava tree and
gasped for breath; never explored Kumka forest, climbed Bada Dongri, or swam in
Palsha Jor and the Jira river.
AI never watched the Krishna Leela and
Ram Leela performed in the village square.
AI never wept when the little squirrel
that fell from the tree broke its leg and died despite tender nursing.
AI never fell in love.
AI never sat beside a sick parent.
Those memories, so very personal and
precious, are not available to AI.
AI has Information; I have Experience, and a little Wisdom
AI knows a lot—far more facts than I
can ever hope to remember.
If I ask for a quick summary of all
the plays of Kalidas and Shakespeare, and compare their dramatic genius in
about 2,000 words, AI would oblige instantly. But it won’t know how much I was
moved by Sakuntala’s pain or King Lear’s great sorrow and mad fury caused by
filial ingratitude.
Sometimes, it goofs up or
hallucinates. But it never suffers anxiety and stress, which I experienced as a
nine-year-old child when I first wrote a School Board examination for a
scholarship. Or the joy when I aced it.
The interview where I was dumb and
tongue-tied and failed, or the one where I was confident, eloquent and
successful.
I learn every day from experience,
mistakes, suffering, forgiveness—from Life.
AI learns from processing voluminous
texts and following algorithms fed into it.
I process life’s experiences, and the
books I read, with a brain which weighs a mere three pounds, and needs a little
nutrition and a few litres of water a day.
AI, by contrast, consumes significant
amounts of electricity and water in the data centres that power it.
I Know Enough about AI to Use it Intelligently
Fear often comes from ignorance.
Humans fear the unknown as children fear going into a dark room. But unless you
open the room and flip the switch, you’d never know the treasures hidden in the
room.
I have experimented with ChatGPT,
Bard, Gemini, Copilot, Perplexity, Claude and Meta AI. Sometimes, I’ve been
disappointed; the response was silly or incorrect, or both. When I corrected
the AI, it readily admitted the mistake and thanked me for it.
But most of the time, I found it
useful.
During my early days of using AI, I
tasked the leading AI tools to solve the Civil Services (Preliminary)
Examination – General Studies Paper I. It was an intellectual exercise to
compare the capabilities of ChatGPT, Bing and Bard.
In 2026, I ran the same paper again
with the newer versions and obtained very different responses. I also realised
that AI models are often reluctant to process all one hundred questions in a
single interaction because each response consumes computing resources and costs
money.
“If I buy a subscription, would you
oblige?” I wondered.
Perhaps.
No, thanks. My curiosity was merely
intellectual, not commercial. I’m happy with my Free Account and its usual
limitations.
Till now, AI has never tried to
mislead me, or tempt me to explore its dark powers since I’ve no interest in
devising a new virus or an IED.
I know what AI can do—and what it
cannot.
What AI has Actually Done for Me
I have used AI for several day-to-day
needs: research assistance, brainstorming, checking facts, suggesting books,
helping organise thoughts, creating illustrations for blogs, and more.
I am thankful to AI for helping me
with those activities. Among others, it has saved me several trips to the local
library.
Proud to be Human
AI can generate a
story; I can live one.
AI can predict
the next word; I can dream the next world.
Being Human
After three years of using AI, I have
reached a simple conclusion. AI is neither a miracle nor a monster. It is a
powerful tool—perhaps the most powerful tool created in my lifetime. Used
wisely, it can save time, expand knowledge, and stimulate creativity. Used
carelessly, it can encourage laziness and dependence.
I am not afraid of AI because I know
what it can do. More importantly, I know what it cannot do. It cannot replace a
lifetime of memories. It cannot experience love, loss, friendship, wonder,
gratitude, or hope. It cannot walk at dawn, watch a sunset, hold a grandchild's
hand, or remember the smell of wet earth after the first monsoon rain.
Be human. Use AI. Learn from it.
Benefit from it. But never surrender to it the very qualities that make you
uniquely and wonderfully human.
***
*As per the May 2026 Challenger Report, released by outplacement and executive coaching firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas, Inc., employers in the USA directly cited AI and automation for roughly 40% of all layoffs in May. This is the highest single-month total for AI-related cuts ever recorded by Challenger.
The fear of job loss is NOT imaginary.

Absolutely true. AI is very helpful and one has to use it sensibly.
ReplyDeleteDear Sir,
DeleteI read your piece with great pleasure — and with the quiet recognition of someone who has been walking a parallel road, though a few steps behind you.
You were among the first people who made me curious rather than anxious about AI. I remember the WhatsApp survey you ran in our group asking how many of us were actually using it. Most of us were spectators then. You were already inside the room with the light switched on.
I am a late entrant, as you know — I began tentatively with Meta AI, moved to ChatGPT, and have recently been working with Perplexity. And I find myself arriving, slowly, at the same conclusions you have set out so elegantly here. AI is a tool. A remarkable one — perhaps the most remarkable of our lifetimes — but a tool nonetheless. It does not replace the person holding it. It amplifies what that person brings to it.
Your line — I’m the writer; AI is my able assistant — stayed with me. I have just finished writing a memoir with the help of an AI assistant. Thirty-two years of my life in the Indian Administrative Service — the postings, the people, the decisions, the failures, the small moments of grace. Every story in that book is mine. Every judgement about what to include and what to leave out is mine. Every correction when the AI got a fact wrong or a name misspelt — mine. What the AI contributed was the craft of arrangement, the patience of an inexhaustible editor, and the ability to hold the thread of a 48,000-word manuscript without losing it.
The experience taught me exactly what you have articulated: AI has information; I have experience. It can write a sentence about the forests of Bastar. It has never stood in them at dawn and heard the silence.
Your Vermont Book Club story made me laugh — and also reminded me that the most important thing about using AI intelligently is exactly what you demonstrate: you knew to ask it, you knew to listen, and you knew to act on what it told you. That combination of curiosity and judgement is not something AI taught you. It is something you brought to AI.
Thank you for writing this, and for having written it before many of us found our courage. Some of us needed to see someone we respect walk through the door first.
With warm regards and admiration,
Rajagopal
Good afternoon Sir, Thanks for your thoughts on A.I.Even I feel the same Regards
ReplyDelete