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My AI Writing Experiment

And Why I'm Not As Afraid Anymore

By Misty RaePublished 5 months ago 5 min read
Some of my publications

Artificial intelligence freaks me out! It feels like this evil dark cloud, looming off in the horizon, waiting to steal everything I've worked my butt off for.

When I think about it, it's that same feeling of nervous dread I used to have when the bullies were waiting outside the classroom of my elementary school to beat my head in.

And there's that same feeling of resignation, too. Like the bullies, AI is here, and there's nothing I can do about it.

But I'm not going to use it, and I sure as heck will not read anything that I even suspect is produced by it.

I've had several arguments with people about this. Some have even said that AI writing is so good now that you can't tell. Maybe I'm arrogant, but I really doubt AI can write like me. Or any other human who writes with even a scintilla of emotion.

I've published 2 novels. One, the debut, I Ran So You Could Fly (The Paris O'Ree Story) has spent several weeks at the top of the bestseller list. I anticipate my second, Moments Make the Man will follow suit. And I've been featured in very popular international publications like Chicken Soup For the Soul.

I can string a few words together. And one of the reasons, probably the main reason I've gotten this far is because of the emotion behind my words. There's an authenticity there that I just can't see a machine or a program producing.

But the claims are out there. There was one that struck me today. While I was on Facebook, an ad appeared for something called Phrasly. It promised to accurately detect AI-generated content and to turn that content into something so human-sounding it would never be detectable.

And it had a free trial.

Enter me to prove a point. I can't help it, it's the lawyer in me.

I grabbed a few paragraphs from something I'm working on. Of course these paragraphs are 100% mine and anyone with even a passing familiarity with my work would know that.

screenshot from my computer

Wait, what? Yup, my totally human-written excerpt was judged by AI to be totally written by AI. Way to fail right off the bat there, Phrasly! Score one for humans!

Oh, but wait there's more. See the little white box asking, "Should we humanize this text?"

Oh, yes, yes, please, humanize my already human words, you dumb bot-sucker. Please show me the error of my ways.

Here's some of what AI came up with. You be the judge.

screenshot from my computer

Here's my original, uneditied human words:

I don’t recognize the woman shuffling quickly around the crowded waiting room. Clad in a blueish-grey wool coat older than time itself, she’s a tiny bundle of exuberance. Friendly, curious about everyone around her, a veritable social butterfly greeting adults and babies alike. Especially babies. If she hadn’t been halfway through her eighties, she might have been running for political office.

“Sit down!” I whispered harshly, “this is an emergency room. These people are sick; they don’t want to be bothered!”

The small crowd let me know in a hurry how wrong I was. What I saw as pestering, they saw as an adorably friendly grandmother type, adding warmth and joy to their otherwise stressful day.

I shamefully shrunk back into my seat and allowed her to continue her rounds. My mother, woman about town. I’d never met her, yet I’d known her my entire life.

We got in to see the doctor in record time. Maybe the nurses were worried that the old lady in the waiting room was creating a disturbance. Or maybe, her ancient cuteness put her to the front of the queue. Either way, she got in in less than 20 minutes.

She complained to the young doctor, a thin man in his mid-thirties with a reddish beard, about her hearing. She could barely hear out of her right ear.

The voice she used wasn’t hers. It was soft and high, like that of a young child. Giggles punctuated every third or fourth word. She was playing cute! Not just cute, she was flirting with the physician! I could feel my toes curling inside my sneakers.

It's not perfect, but it's part of a draft and it's 100% me.

Let's look at what the brilliant AI did to it in its effort to make it appear more human:

I don’t know this woman. She’s darting back and forth among the harried people in the full waiting room. Small, darting like a pixie on pigtails. Ancient, musty blueish-grey wool coat that looks to have survived a shipwreck. Friendly and intrusive, peppering people with questions. One of those people who makes a point to say hello to every adult and baby in the room. Especially babies. If she hadn’t been in the latter half of her eighties, she might have been a politician on the make.

“Sit down!” I hissed rudely, “this is an emergency room. These are sick people who don’t want to be bothered!”

The small group of bystanders made it clear, with quick efficiency, that I was wrong. What I was hearing as harassment, they were hearing as adorably loquacious grandmother act, an addition of comfort and good cheer to their already challenging day.

I tucked away my rudeness and slid back into my seat, letting her continue her social rounds. My mom. Social butterfly, woman about town. I never met her, but I’ve known her my whole life.

We were through to see the doctor in lightning speed. It was possible that the nurses were concerned that the old coot in the waiting room was making a ruckus. Or it could have been that her ancient grandmaship had put her at the front of the line. Whatever the reason, we were in to see the doctor in less than 20 minutes.

She sat up on the stretcher, a mattress on wheels, and told the young doctor she was having trouble with her hearing. Barely heard out of her right ear at all.

The voice she spoke in wasn’t hers. A delicate high voice, a child’s voice. Giggles falling every third or fourth word. She was batting those lashes! Not just batting, she was batting at this physician! I could feel my toes curling inside my sneakers.

Yeah, I don't think so. I don't see the AI version fooling anyone. Every single ounce of authentic emotion has been stripped from the original and replaced with an overly descriptive, awkward facsimile of what AI thinks emotion looks like.

I am NOT impressed.

But I am happy.

Humans for the win!

If you want something that reads like a human wrote it, write it yourself. We can tell when you don't.

Rant over.

Process

About the Creator

Misty Rae

Author of the best-selling novel, I Ran So You Could Fly (The Paris O'Ree Story), Chicken Soup For the Soul contributor, mom to 2 dogs & 3 humans. Nature lover. Chef. Recovering lawyer. Living my best life in the middle of nowhere.

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Excellent work. Looking forward to reading more!

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Comments (9)

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  • Mariann Carroll2 months ago

    You just got to laugh at AI that dont have the human eyes' or emotions. They sometimes put words together that their computer brain know how. Congratulations 🎊 👏 I know you are a great writer! You finally got your talent published for the world to see and enjoy! Long time coming. 🥰🥰🥰

  • Lightning Bolt ⚡5 months ago

    More people should see this, Misty. I'm sharing it in the VSS. ⚡💙Bill⚡

  • Kimberly J Egan5 months ago

    Great article and VERY timely! I just recently had my first contact with AI, in creating pictures that I couldn't find for my Vocal stories. Yes, I know, it's better to use a human artist or photographer, but when I make pennies on Vocal, I'm not going to spend dollars for an illustration. I went on to use the same program to visualize several characters for a novel that I'm writing, which allowed me to add a few details that I hadn't before. I will be self-publishing, so when I have covers done, I will probably have the artist use the pictures as a guide. While I never would use AI to write anything--as so masterfully demonstrated above!--I did also succumb to an offer of a free evaluation of 10,000 words of that same novel from an AI critique service. I don't agree with a good 50% of the evaluation, as I don't think that AI fully understands fiction, but it did identify some weak areas that I will improve in a second draft. Final thoughts: AI is a great tool for supporting writing by humans, but I can't foresee it ever replacing writing by humans (at least not for the next couple of decades). It's when we let AI do our thinking and creating for us that we fall into a very serious trap.

  • Raymond G. Taylor5 months ago

    Ha ha, well done for facing your fears and taking a bold step by running your own experiment into AI capability. Humans 1, calculating machines... well that's what they are. Human touch is always best.

  • Nahhhh, I like yours wayyyy better. No AI can come close to your writing or any of ours

  • I had one of those scanners scam poetry I wrote at 17 on 1967 and I remember sitting in my blue room with bright orange carpet and all that stuff. Emotions poured into my poetry as I listened to Bob Dylan on the old record player. The scan said I was 100 percent AI. There was no AI in 1967 nor cellphones or computers. So, what I see is AI is scaring everyone that is not into technology. I use AI as a tool. I can not stand typewriters 🤣🤣🤣

  • Lana V Lynx5 months ago

    I like using AI to generate images. Writing with AI is a big no-no for me and I can tell the difference because my students often try to slip in AI-generated essays.

  • Sandy Gillman5 months ago

    I really enjoyed this rant. It’s such a clear reminder of how much authenticity and raw emotion matter in writing.

  • Lightning Bolt ⚡5 months ago

    That wasn't a rant. That was informative! And I'm super impressed by your 'credentials', the things you've already published!! ⚡💙 Bill⚡

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