AI vs AI: Running From What We Already Use

Avoiding AI is no longer a real choice.

For those who’d rather listen.
Running from Tomorrow • Darem Placer

Many people say they hate AI and that they do not use it. Some teachers tell students not to use AI for written reports or artwork. Yet the same teachers rely on AI checkers to detect AI-made work. AI is banned, but AI is used to enforce the ban. That is the contradiction.

AI is already everywhere. Canva has AI. Browsers have AI. Phones have AI. Operating systems, chat apps, cameras, search tools, and grammar tools all use AI in some form. Avoiding AI today is not a choice. Most people are already using it without realizing it.

This situation is not new. In the late 1990s and early 2000s, many parents were afraid of computers. They believed computers were dangerous or useless. A few parents thought differently. They encouraged their children to learn computers and programming because they sensed where the world was heading.

Today, almost everyone owns a smartphone. A smartphone is a computer, and a powerful one. The fear did not stop technology. People simply adapted later, often without understanding how it works. The same pattern is now repeating with AI.

Some artists feel insecure about AI. Not because AI is better, but because effort is no longer the gatekeeper. Difficulty alone no longer proves value. Audiences do not vote for purity. They respond to impact. If a song feels real or an image connects, the tool used does not matter to them.

That is why the question “Is this AI?” feels strange. It can sound like an insult or a compliment at the same time. Creators are left unsure how to react, whether to feel offended or proud.

There is no way to remove AI from the world. AI is not a website that can be blocked. It is becoming part of everyday infrastructure. Technology does not level humans. Humans who refuse to adapt level themselves.

Every generation goes through this cycle. Photography challenged painting. Synthesizers challenged bands. Digital media challenged film. Now AI challenges everything. The future is not anti-AI or pro-AI. It is post-AI. One day, people will stop asking what tool was used and focus on one question only. Does it matter, or are we just Running from Tomorrow?

⌨ ᴛʸᵖⁱⁿᵍ ᴏᵘᵗ ᵒᶠ ᵗʰᵉ ʙˡᵘᵉ ᵈᵃʳᵉᵐ ᵐᵘˢⁱᶜ ᵇˡᵒᵍ

Living in Two Octaves explores the duality of life—shifting between emotional highs and lows, balancing the physical and spiritual, and living in the space between the past and future. It’s all about the contrasts and connections that shape our journey. This album includes Running from Tomorrow.

Listen on Apple Music, Apple Music Classical, and YouTube Music

The “First” and the “Last”

Some rise fast and bend the rules. Others stay true and hold on. In time, life shows who really deserves to be first.

Some people always want to be the “first.” They speak loud, move fast, and take the lead in everything. It looks impressive—they set trends, create systems, and define what success means. But as time goes on, power changes the rules. The goal shifts from doing right to just staying ahead. Soon, people start copying them, thinking that pride, shortcuts, and control are the new normal.

Like a strong current, the influence of the “first” pulls everyone along. Many get swept away, even those who once knew what was right.

Then there are those who stay “last.” They’re not slow—they’re holding on. While the crowd drifts with the flow, they cling to what’s fair and true. They don’t want to be “first” if it means becoming false. It’s hard, tiring, and often lonely, but they endure.

And when life hopefully turns things around, the current weakens. People start to see who really stood firm. The “first” lose what they built on pride, and the “last”—the ones who never let go of what’s right—finally rise in quiet strength.

It doesn’t always happen fast, but life has a way of showing who truly deserves to be first. Human ranking doesn’t define worth. Fairness—whether divine or human—doesn’t follow ego or timing.

Maybe that was what Jesus was trying to show all along—not a promise for later, but a mirror for how life should already work.

The last will be first, and the first will be last.” (Matthew 20:16)

Sometimes, walking against the current feels like Running from Tomorrow itself.

Running from Tomorrow • Darem Placer

⌨ ᴛʸᵖⁱⁿᵍ ᴏᵘᵗ ᵒᶠ ᵗʰᵉ ʙˡᵘᵉ ᵈᵃʳᵉᵐ ᵐᵘˢⁱᶜ ᵇˡᵒᵍ

Living in Two Octaves explores the duality of life—shifting between emotional highs and lows, balancing the physical and spiritual, and living in the space between the past and future. It’s all about the contrasts and connections that shape our journey. This album includes Running from Tomorrow.

Listen on Apple Music, Apple Music Classical, and YouTube Music