The Death of Words! A Wake-Up Call to a Society Losing Its Soul
- Vie
- May 27
- 2 min read

In an age where artificial intelligence writes our headlines, sells our dreams, and crafts our stories, one question arises from the silence:
What happens when the words stop feeling real?
We live in a time where connection is engineered, emotions are templated, and creativity is processed like fast food, efficient, mass-produced, and stripped of flavor. While AI is undeniably a brilliant tool, one we should responsibly integrate into our fast-moving society, there’s a critical line we've crossed. A line where inspiration gives way to imitation, and the heartbeat of human expression is drowned by polished, robotic perfection.
And if you've felt it, that hollow pause when reading a message, that was meant to connect but feels eerily familiar, you're not alone.
“Authenticity” Became Automation
The coaching industry, creative arts, and even the self-help space have become battlegrounds of branding and funnels. Everyone’s selling. Everyone’s “authentic.” But increasingly, no one sounds real.
Messages arrive not from a place of lived wisdom, but from ChatGPT prompts and copy-paste templates. The result? A digital chorus of sameness, perfectly formatted, emotionally hollow, and shockingly effective at numbing the very thing it was meant to inspire human connection.
We’re not just losing originality. We’re losing our language. We’re starving our souls.
The Soul of Creativity Can’t Be Replicated Whether it’s writing, photography, coaching, music, or storytelling, these crafts are not just skills. They are transmissions of soul, shaped by years of failure, growth, and devotion.
But in this new game of “Me too, I can do it all,” genuine artistry is buried under the noise. Everyone is a life coach. Everyone is a content creator. Everyone has a course.
Few have the scars it takes to guide. Even fewer have the silence to listen.
Real Work Takes Time, and That’s the Point
Why did we decide that speed equals value? That more equals better? That reach is more important than resonance?
Albert Einstein once said, “Strive not to be a success, but rather to be of value.” His genius wasn’t in what he knew, but in how deeply he thought, questioned, and stood alone in discomfort. That’s what creation takes. That’s what coaching takes. That’s what being human takes.
What if we stopped competing with machines and returned to our true self, our vulnerability, our complexity, our flawed brilliance? What if we honored the slow path of mastery, of integrity, of soul-led impact?
We don’t need more brands. We need more truth. We need more YOU.
Not the version of you polished for LinkedIn, Instagram, your next big selling Book. Not the version molded by a funnel. But you that has lived through it.
Because in a world where everyone is shouting, the quietest voice, the real one, is the one we all are still longing to hear.

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