Disability

WHY AI FEELS LIKE A GIFT FOR SOMEONE LIKE ME


Growing up with a physical disability also meant growing up with a learning disability.

One of the challenges I never outgrew was writing.

I love words. I love stories. I love sharing what’s in my heart. But my hands have never moved as fast as my mind.

That’s what living with cerebral palsy is like for me.

My thoughts race ahead — already forming the next paragraph — while my hands are still trying to finish the sentence before it. By the time I type one idea, my brain has already moved on. Sometimes entire chunks of what I wanted to say disappear before they ever reach the page.

It isn’t that I don’t know what I want to write.

It’s that my body can’t always keep up.

One of my biggest challenges is missing pieces of paragraphs. I know what should be there, but the connection between my brain and my hands doesn’t always allow it to come out fully.

I’ve asked others for help with my writing before. But that often meant waiting until they had time. And when they finally looked at it, my work sometimes came back completely changed. The meaning wasn’t the same anymore. The voice didn’t sound like me.

Then I found ChatGPT.

I know people have many opinions about AI and writing. Some believe it’s taking the easy way out. Others see it as plagiarism.

But that’s not what it is for me.

For me, AI is help.

AI has helped me make my blogs make sense.

It has learned the way I write and understands how my thoughts flow. It knows when something is missing and will either fill in the gap or ask me if I want it written one way or another. That choice matters to me, because the meaning always stays mine.

It keeps my story intact.

AI doesn’t change what I’m trying to say — it simply helps me find better words to express it, while keeping my heart and my voice exactly where they belong.

One of the hardest parts of writing for me is softening a story.

I can write emotion. I can write truth. But sometimes my words come out too sharp or too heavy — not because that’s how I feel, but because my brain and hands don’t always connect smoothly.

Adding gentleness, flow, and warmth can be difficult for me.

That’s where AI helps the most.

It softens the edges without taking away the meaning. It helps the story breathe. It allows my emotions to land gently instead of all at once.

AI doesn’t write for me.

It listens to me.

And then it helps my words sound the way they were meant to feel.

I still create the ideas.
I still write the dialogue.
I still know my characters and my emotions.

AI simply helps fill in the gaps — the same way an editor or trusted reader would.

For the first time, my writing finally feels like it matches what’s inside my head.

And that’s not cheating.

That’s accessibility.

Marie W.O.W.C.P.
Seeing the beauty between every challenge

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