I don’t Google anymore
What I'm doing instead
I’ve realized something about myself.
I don’t Google much anymore.
When I have a question, I ask an AI tool to summarize the world for me—and I stay put. It’s efficient. It’s useful. And it’s changing something about how I think.
When the internet first showed up in my adult life, it was messier and goofier—cat videos, Charlie the Unicorn, links that led nowhere in particular. You didn’t just get answers. You wandered.
Recently, my chiropractor told me he signed up for an AI class after reading my book.
“I don’t want to get left behind,” he said—right as he adjusted my neck, which felt like an oddly perfect metaphor.
What struck me wasn’t the class. It was the instinct: to orient before deciding what matters.
I wrote a longer reflection about this here:
👉 I Don’t Google Anymore, and I’m Paying Attention to What That Changes
No rush. Just something to sit with.
MaryLou


