What Do We Choose to Keep Human?Zack KassWhat Do We Choose to Keep Human?

https://youtu.be/81Ne0GW-5_8

When I was a little girl reading Jules Verne’s Around the World in Eighty Days, connecting with the entire world felt like pure science fiction. Last weekend, it took only one click. I sat in a room with 648,000 people from all around the world. Tony Robbins among the voices, and many others filling my screen. I did not even need to travel. The whole world came into my room. The AI Advantage Summit. Live. Global.

And it reminded me. The world has shifted before. And it will again.

In the 1700s, the Industrial Revolution took our physical labour. Machines replaced muscles. The world was never the same. We are almost halfway through 2026, and reaching somewhere far more tender. There is another kind of machine at work these days. They call it artificial intelligence. AI. And this one is taking us somewhere else entirely.

AI is learning to sound like us. Fake news floods every feed. What is true and what is not? What can we trust?

And that makes me wonder. What does this new invention of ours do to the way we see ourselves? How we think. How we feel. How we relate to each other. How far will this take us, and in which direction?

I have more questions than answers. I always will. And as a very curious one, that is exactly why I showed up for the AI Advantage Summit live. Because the change is already here. I can either face it and get a small clue of where the experts and pioneers in this field say it will take us, or I can stick my head in the sand like an ostrich and close my eyes. That last one? Not an option. Not for me.

And one thing is certain. This shift is going to affect all of us. Every single human being will have to navigate it. And in this era, there are those creating this technology, profiting from it, shaping it as pioneers. And there are those just using it. As always, the picture of this transformation is much bigger than me and what I think. And yet, in the middle of all that bigness, one voice cut through at the AI Summit. The voice that nailed me to full attention was Zack Kass.

The Automation Boundary: What We Hand Over and What We Keep

He is a former OpenAI leader, now an advisor to governments and global leaders on AI, and author of The Next RenAIssance.

Kass introduced an idea called the Automation Boundary. It is the line between what we are willing to hand over to machines, and what we insist on keeping human. He called it virtuous friction versus vicious friction.

Vicious friction is the stuff that wears us down: the admin, the busy work, the repetitive tasks that drain energy without giving anything back. Let AI take those. Let them go.

Virtuous friction is different. It is the hard conversation you need to have. The thing you are learning that does not come easily. The struggle that, precisely because it is difficult, builds something in you. These are the things that define us, not just drain us. And Kass’s point is simple: do not let AI take those away.

That landed in my body.

Who Is Really Shaping AI?

And yet, my critical inner voice, my most honest companion, had something to say too. Deep down I know that he, like the rest of us, does not see the whole picture. There are too many factors in how this era of human history will unfold. But people like him, with the position and economic power to shape it, are already doing so. They have the resources to create summits like this one, drawing 648,000 people together from all around the world. People who are searching for something. People who are ready to be moved. That is worth naming.

And if I am honest, I include myself in that question. Because I use it daily. And I can feel how easy it is to lean on it a little more each day. That is worth watching.

But in his talk, he touched something I am deeply occupied by. Our choices.

To me, choices go all the way down to the micro level. The thoughts we think, the emotions we feel, the tiny daily moments that quietly shape who we are and how we relate to everything around us. And from all of that, a choice. What do we say? What do we do? How do we respond?

Decision Fatigue and AI: Which Choices Do We Keep?

Kass was touching choices from a different angle. That we are today bombarded by so many of them. That the sheer weight of decisions we face every single day creates a quiet exhaustion, and that exhaustion is slowly opening the door wider for AI to step in.

Which decisions matter enough to keep making ourselves? And which ones could we let go of, hand over, navigate differently?

I am not certain I caught every detail of what he meant. But this is what stayed with me, and felt worth sitting with.

And honestly, I use AI daily. And I am going to delve deeper into it, use it more professionally. Learn how it can simplify my working day, so I can focus on what I really love to do. Working with clients who want to create change, not only by analysing their thoughts and emotions, but by moving through them. Through holistic movement.

And in that work, creativity is not a nice extra. It is essential. So naturally, I was curious about the creative side of AI too.

I took a picture, a heart-shaped stone from one of my walks in the forest, added a prompt to Adobe Firefly, and watched it turn into stars bursting from stone.

Small thing. But it made me smile. And despite that joy of turning a stone into a bursting star, I am still asking the big questions. Because I believe they matter.

Everything we do with this technology adds up. At home. At work. In our relationships. In our daily choices. Not in some grand, invisible way. In the very ordinary, everyday way. Each small decision shapes the direction this all goes. Mine as much as yours.

So what are your thoughts on artificial intelligence? Are we losing the human touch, or is it helping us free ourselves to be more fully human?

I am Parisa Radpey, the writer of these pages and founder of Dhyana Donya Movement & Health. I am currently building something that scares me a little and excites me a lot. A space and community for people who want to create real change. Not only by thinking differently, but by moving through what they carry. Through holistic movement. At Dhyana Donya Movement & Health you will find all my services and offerings.

If this makes you curious, I have put together a short guide on what holistic movement actually means and how it works. Get the free guide here.

You can find me on Instagram most days, sharing small reflections and real moments. And when words are not enough, music moves what nothing else can. Find my playlist on Spotify under Movement Coach Parisa. Let it inspire you to move wildly and freely.

I am also part of the Wise and Shine blogger community, where honest voices gather to reflect on life as it really is.

Want to stay connected? I would love to hear from you. Connect with me here and tell me what brought you here.

#AI #AIAdvantageSummit #artificialIntelligence #automation #bodyAwareness #chatgpt #consciousLiving #DhyanaDonyaMovementHealth #digitalAge #holisticMovement #parisaRadpey #technology #technologyAndHumanity #writing #ZackKass

What does being a woman mean?

https://youtu.be/QSzlDQN89rQ?si=rzr1ALBmgJ8-6XZw

If you have been following me for a while, you may have noticed that I often speak from my own life experiences. Not because my life is more special than anyone else’s, but because through this, I want to reveal something we all have — an inner world — and that we all meet it in different ways.

For me, being a woman has, without a doubt, formed who I am — how I see life, how life has influenced me, and how I interact with everything. Today I see more clearly than ever that my story is also the story of the women before me — my female ancestors — carried in my body, in my DNA. Their stories are intertwined with mine.

When I was younger, I did not care about any of this. Life was more black and white, and I played the role of the rebel in it. I did what I had to do to survive what I was standing in. My stubbornness became my strength. It kept me from falling in the face of life’s harshness — as a young woman, in a country I did not fully belong to, carrying both my personal story and my family’s story at the same time.

But as the years have passed, and with the ripening that comes with them, I find myself in a different place — a new angle. I see how being human is shaped by many layers — our gender, our genes, our DNA, our history, our personal story, and our interaction with the world around us — culture, society, time.

And I am more and more in awe of the depth of it all. I also begin to understand why some never choose to widen their horizon beyond a black-and-white view. It is easier to stay there than to face how layered and wide life really is — and how we are both shaped by it and part of it.

That depth is also what draws me to explore life through other people’s eyes and lenses.

This is probably why I chose to study journalism in my younger years, and later created my own blog and YouTube channel. It also explains why my career path has moved between communication and working with people in different settings and across different ages — often people at crossroads or in periods of change.

So, shortly put, I find myself more drawn to the voices of ordinary people than to celebrities or experts. That is why most of my interviews are with ordinary people.

I believe we are all our own experts if we learn to listen to our inner guidance and build trust in it. By bringing out these voices, I hope we can begin to see what we all have in common, despite our differences. We are one human family, all on a shared human journey — with all that it contains.

With this in mind, I wanted to explore a simple, open question in this interview:

What does it mean to be a woman?

I am fully aware that we live in a time when many say there is no difference between men and women — at least in some parts of the world. At the same time, we are still living in a world shaped by thousands of years of male influence.

With this as a backdrop, I asked this question during my two-month stay in an ashram in India at the beginning of 2025, where I stayed among people from different backgrounds, each carrying their own reflections on life.

As I edited the interview, I found real joy in weaving together their honest and personal answers. What became clear to me is that there is not one definition — but many voices.

And maybe that is where the value lies. I hope you find something in it as well.

Thanks for stopping by and checking out this post! If you haven’t already, be sure to hit subscribe to stay updated whenever I share something new. While you’re here, take a moment to explore the Wise and Shine Zine blogger community—it’s full of inspiration. You can also find me on Instagram for more updates and behind-the-scenes moments. Looking for tunes or movement inspiration? Head over to my Spotify—just search for Movement Coach Parisa and let the playlist fuel your day!

By the way, I also work with 1:1 holistic movement guidance if you feel you need support while walking your path — someone to hold space for your process, exactly where you are, as you build trust in your own inner guidance.

You can book a discovery call, where we set up a short 15-minute WhatsApp chat to explore if this feels like the right fit — for both of us.

In these sessions, we don’t stay in analysis. We meet what is present in your life through movement, for example:

  • Creative and physical exploration
  • Body awareness
  • Voice and expression
  • Writing for clarity
#ashramExperience #holisticMovement #humanStories #Life #parisaRadpey #peoeplelifepolitcisandbullshit #selfAwareness #selfDiscovery #whatDoesBeingAWomanMean #woman #women