Invitation
When the idea for this book emerged, I had in mind people intrigued with the possibility that writing can be enjoyable and productive. I wanted to explore what's happening when it is and isn't. I also wanted to clear up confusion about these being the just desserts to those who have endured enough suffering to finally have something to put on a page that exceeds the value of a silent blankness.
One of my wishes is for a world where more people write more. Writing more means thinking more. We need a world where more people are thinking more. The countless wicked problems we have inherited, invented, and will pass on to the next generations can only be addressed by thinking beings. Thinking more is currently at risk with the proliferation of artificial intelligence. It's a world where we no longer need thinking to produce emails, academic papers, resumes, cover letters, professional reports, performance reviews, personal messages to friends and family, and even pre-nuptials, wedding vows, and eulogies.
We’re just in the infancy stages of this technology and its implications. The idea is simple: efficiently replace conscious human thinking with machine prompts. What’s not new is the phenomenon of human beings outsourcing their thinking to other “superior” thinking sources. Even as AI promises to be at least as disruptive as electricity and the internet, it is not a good reason to get twisted up in drama about it. It simply raises questions we’re not prepared for, questions we will only intelligently answer together.
Whatever happens to artificial intelligence, current and future generations will have problems requiring us to do our own thinking. Writing will continue to be a prime source of thinking. If we want to value thinking as a prime portal to connection, conscience, and creativity, we will need to write more. Writing more will allow us to think more. More people will write more if they find a way to make writing intrinsically enjoyable and productive. This is the promise of flow.
Flow and the Inner Game of Writing (4 min) - from the book