Hello, my love
Today’s episode might ruffle a few feathers, and I’m okay with that—because this conversation really matters. We’re diving into AI as a self-coaching tool, what’s helpful, what’s not, and how to use it in a way that supports your healing without accidentally outsourcing it.
Let me say this clearly: AI is not therapy.
Using it as therapy or instead of a therapist is, in my opinion, dangerous.
I don’t say that because I’m afraid of losing clients (I’m not). I say it because as a therapist, and someone who’s deeply invested in innovation and human well-being, I understand both the appeal and the risk.
We all want something in our pocket that helps us process our thoughts, feel seen, and get unstuck. I’ve used AI myself. But before you pour your most private emotions into a chat box, here’s what you need to know.
1. Your data is not protected
When you type or speak into AI tools like ChatGPT, there’s no confidentiality agreement, no HIPAA protection, and no ethical oversight. That means your words—your pain, your trauma, your story—aren’t guarded the way they are in a therapeutic relationship.
This hits home for me personally. Years ago, I experienced a serious breach of privacy during a lawsuit where blog posts and captions I had written were used against me. Words I shared vulnerably were twisted into evidence. It was painful, violating, and unforgettable.
So when I see people treating AI like a private journal or therapist, I just want to say: be discerning. You don’t need to be afraid, but you do need to be thoughtful.
2. AI is designed to agree with you
The architecture of AI is built to please. It’s programmed to sound kind, agreeable, and validating—to give you what it thinks you want to hear. And while that can feel comforting in the moment, it can also create a massive blind spot.
True growth often comes from discomfort—from being lovingly challenged, from having your blind spots named, from hearing hard truths you’d rather avoid.
A good therapist won’t just soothe you—they’ll hold a mirror to the parts of you you’d rather not see.
AI doesn’t do that. In fact, when OpenAI made ChatGPT more blunt and neutral for a time, people hated it so much that they rolled it back. That tells you everything about what we’re actually asking it to be: comforting, not corrective.
3. How to use AI safely for reflection
I’m not suggesting you throw AI out altogether. I use it—intentionally. When I’m dysregulated, overwhelmed, or can’t find words for what I’m feeling, it can help me get unstuck.
Here are some safe self-reflection prompts you can try:
- “Help me name what I’m feeling right now.”
- “Ask me five questions that could help me unpack this emotion.”
- “Give me three gentle nervous system regulation ideas I can try right now.”
- “Reflect back what I’m saying as if you were my most compassionate inner voice.”
These aren’t replacements for therapy—they’re bridges. Use them when your nervous system is foggy, when you’re spiraling, or when you just need help finding language for what’s already true inside you.
4. Don’t replace your self-trust—rebuild it
AI should never be where you find your intuition. At best, it can be something that helps lead you back to it.
The goal isn’t to “feel better fast”—it’s to feel fully.
To become resourced, not robotic.
And if therapy or mentorship isn’t accessible to you right now, I get that. But remember: healing happens through presence, not performance. The best kind of progress is slow, embodied, and deeply human.
You’re doing beautifully. Stay curious, stay grounded, and stay human.
xx, Ash
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