Picture this: you’ve found “the one.” You’re ready to pop the big question. But instead of pacing the floor, rehearsing your heartfelt words, you open your laptop and type, “Write me the perfect marriage proposal.”
Seconds later, a beautifully crafted speech appears on your screen, complete with romantic metaphors, Shakespearean flourishes, and maybe even a well-timed joke about how you “crash together like two perfectly aligned algorithms.”
It’s perfect… almost too perfect.
Artificial Intelligence has quickly become everyone’s creative sidekick, from writing emails to generating marketing copy to, apparently, proposing marriage. The stories are endless: AI-generated love poems, ChatGPT-written vows, and even deep-fake engagement videos.
And honestly, it’s easy to see the appeal. AI can help people who struggle to put emotions into words or who want to brainstorm creative ideas. It’s like having a well-read friend who’s never too tired to help.
But here’s the thing: AI can’t feel love; it can only describe it.
It doesn’t know the story of your first date, or how your partner laughs so hard they cry, or that you burn every pancake you try to make but keep doing it anyway because they love breakfast in bed.
When it comes to the things that matter most: emotion, authenticity, and human connection, AI can’t take the lead. It can only assist.
AI is a lot like a hammer.
Used correctly, it helps you build a smarter workflow, a more engaging piece of content, or yes, even a sweet outline for a proposal speech. But drop it on your foot, and it hurts.
That’s because, like any tool, AI’s value depends on how you use it.
It can:
But it can also:
AI isn’t here to replace human creativity; it’s here to amplify it. Just like a hammer can’t build a house on its own, AI can’t build great ideas without you.
Of course, where there’s AI, there’s bound to be a few… quirks.
Consider the man who used AI to write his wedding vows. The tool included the line, “Our love is as strong as my Wi-Fi signal... most days.”
Or the viral story of someone who asked AI to write a “romantic poem” about their partner, only to receive something that rhymed “beautiful” with “computable.”
These moments are hilarious, but they also prove a point. AI doesn’t replace hearts. It can mimic structure, not sincerity. And while it can produce endless words, only you can fill them with meaning.
Here’s the good news: you don’t have to pick a side. You don’t have to choose between “all human” and “all AI.” The best results come when you bring both to the table.
Think of it as a creative duet:
Together, you can brainstorm smarter, write faster, and still stay authentic.
And yes, even use it to plan a proposal, if you remember to keep your story at the center of it.
Maybe the perfect use of AI isn’t asking it to propose for you—but asking it to help you find the right words for you.
You could start with a prompt like:
“Help me write a heartfelt proposal that captures how I felt the first time I met my partner.”
Now you’re using AI responsibly: it’s helping you organize emotion, not fabricate it. It’s co-creating, not taking over.
Because at the end of the day, no matter how advanced AI becomes, there are still things only a human can say, and mean.
Want to make sure your organization uses AI responsibly (and avoids its more awkward moments)?
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