@Jimelux "As human beings, we carry things that the robot does not have. Shame. Doubt. Those are real human experiences, real human emotions. The robot does not know what shame feels like. It does not know what it means to doubt yourself."
@severelyours
@Jimelux@thewordweavers Yes! It can (and it does) cheat the audience of one’s authenticity, especially if have AI do ALL the creative process as a shortcut to a final product.
But, if you use it as a means to access, connect and channel your own depth. To find your voice. Then… maybe, it blesses.
@Jimelux "AI will shorten the path to what you need. If it was going to take you days to write a line, you can brainstorm with AI and get there faster."
@severelyours
"The ability to use our language to express the human condition as it is experienced in Uganda — in Acholi, in Lango, in Lugbara — that affords people the dignity of identity."
@joseph_lagen
"I was on that anti-AI platform. I was the opposing party. But ever since, I have found ways to use it.
"If you are creating art, please turn the AI off and engage your mind. If you are doing work, please use whatever."
@joseph_lagen
"When So Severe joined, we already had AI in the curriculum. But he had much more knowledge about writing with AI than I had prepared. I remember him just taking it away - like he was the sensei. The class became him taking us through how that model works."
@wake_256
"A program like this will allow you to connect with something. Whether or not you write. It will allow you to connect with expression in whatever form you find it."
@severelyours
"While it might not be expression in the way we as speakers do it - with written word, with 'nice English' - if it is something you see and feel, then it is because you can feel it. And if you can feel it, you can express it."
@severelyours
"As a mastermind mentor, you are literally the first face of Word Weavers Academy to the people out there when you go into schools. You have to break through the barriers before anyone even hears what you came to say."
@MamaKLA
"Another thing the program did for me was allow me to recognize where I exist in a world that is changing toward artificial intelligence. That was a specific part of the curriculum — how to use AI if you use AI."
@severelyours
"The program reminded me that to be a Word Weaver is to have freedom. To experience it through your own form of expression, to find your courage to express yourself, or even just to witness it in someone else."
@severelyours
"I think confidence comes and goes. It is not always there. It sits on a shelf, and you have to come and pick it up when you need it. Recognizing when you needed it — that is something I did not know until I was in the program."
@severelyours
"Sometimes I write something and AI tells me, 'You broke the flow here. This part is disjointed.' And I look at that sentence - the one AI has picked out - and I realize that is the sentence where I feel most me. I am even more confident in it now."
@severelyours
"When you see someone like Uncle Mo or Ninja C, you are seeing wordsmiths who have turned their craft into something visibly tangible and financially viable. That is the ultimate win: seeing the art pay."
@MamaKLA
“One of the hardest things was selling the idea to traditional schools and saying, ‘This is valuable.’ Not resistance - just silence. Slow responses. Non-responsiveness. That kind of quiet rejection makes you question yourself.”
@wake_256
"The network of Word Weavers touches spaces that an artist working alone might take years to reach. When you move with the collective power of this Academy, doors open differently."
@MamaKLA
“Sometimes the dreams we have as children are clues, not conclusions. They show us how our minds work long before we know what to call it.”
“Creativity doesn’t disappear. It waits. But guidance determines how early it blooms.”
@jehorukundo