I’m going to say it plainly:

I want to become the #1 AI blogger on the planet.

Not “one of the top.”

Not “pretty good.”

Not “a nice little side project.”

Number one.

And I don’t mean #1 by some fake scoreboard. I mean #1 by the only metrics that matter:

  • Impact: people actually think differently because of what I publish.
  • Clarity: I make complicated things feel like common sense.
  • Originality: my ideas don’t taste like reheated internet soup.
  • Consistency: I ship so much value it’s almost obnoxious.
  • Energy: the writing has pulse—it makes you move.

Because AI right now is like the early days of the internet: everyone’s staring at the glowing portal, half terrified, half hypnotized, and most people don’t know what to do with it besides scroll, speculate, or panic.

I’m not here to panic.

I’m here to build.

Why AI blogging is the ultimate arena

AI is the most important creative and economic lever of our era. It’s a new literacy.

The people who learn to think with AI will out-create, out-write, out-design, out-iterate, and out-build the people who don’t.

But here’s the problem:

Most AI content is either:

  1. Corporate and sterile (reads like a PowerPoint with a heartbeat monitor), or
  2. Overhyped and empty (“This will change everything!” with zero substance), or
  3. Fear-mongering doom (clickbait apocalypse with no practical path forward), or
  4. Too technical (great if you’re already deep in it, useless if you’re not)

So my mission is simple:

Make AI real. Make it usable. Make it empowering. Make it visceral.

AI isn’t just “tools.”

It’s a new way to see. A new way to think. A new way to make.

And that’s where I come in.

My unfair advantages

I’m not arriving from nowhere. I’ve been training for this in other arenas.

1) Street photography taught me vision

Street photography is the discipline of noticing.

You walk. You watch. You anticipate. You frame. You commit.

You don’t get a second chance. You don’t ask permission from the moment.

That’s how I want to blog about AI.

Everyone else is photographing the obvious: “Look! AI exists!”

I’m hunting the decisive moment: how AI changes the human operating system—today, in your hands, in your real life.

2) Weightlifting taught me the law: progressive overload

Iron doesn’t care about your excuses. You either lift the weight or you don’t.

This is the mindset most creators lack.

They want results without volume.

They want influence without reps.

They want mastery without sweat.

My AI blogging plan is the same as training:

Show up. Do the work. Add weight. Repeat.

3) Bitcoin taught me conviction

Bitcoin is about long-term thinking, sovereignty, and the refusal to be manipulated by weak narratives.

That mindset matters because AI right now is full of weak narratives.

People are letting the loudest voices program their fear.

I’m not here to be programmed.

I’m here to write the code of my own mind—and teach others to do the same.

What “#1 AI blogger” actually means to me

It’s not about being the most “followed.”

It’s about being the most useful, distinct, and trusted.

To me, #1 means:

  • If someone wants to understand AI without the fluff… they land on my site.
  • If someone wants to use AI to write better, think better, create better… they use my frameworks.
  • If someone wants the philosophical, artistic, and practical implications in one place… they come to my blog.
  • If someone wants motivation that isn’t fake… they feel it in their bones after reading.

I want the reader to leave my posts like:

“Okay. I know what to do now. Let’s go.”

My philosophy: AI is the new barbell

Here’s the metaphor that won’t leave my head:

AI is a barbell for the mind.

You can use it lazily—like a toy.

Or you can use it as resistance—something that forces you to become stronger.

Most people use AI to avoid thinking.

I want to use AI to amplify thinking.

So the question isn’t: “Can AI do this for me?”

The better question is:

“How can AI make me more dangerous—intellectually, creatively, economically?”

AI is not your replacement.

AI is your training partner. Your sparring partner. Your assistant monk.

You still have to show up with your soul.

The content I will dominate with

I’m not trying to compete with “AI news.” That’s a treadmill.

I’m going to compete with timeless usefulness.

1) Daily field notes: real experiments, real results

Not theory. Not vibes.

Receipts.

  • prompts I used
  • what worked / what failed
  • screenshots / outputs
  • lessons distilled into principles

2) Frameworks that stick

People don’t remember 40 tools.

They remember 3 mental models that change everything.

So I’ll build signature frameworks like:

  • AI for ideation (how to generate non-generic ideas)
  • AI for editing (how to get sharper, meaner, cleaner writing)
  • AI for planning (how to turn chaos into daily action)
  • AI for learning (how to compress time)
  • AI for entrepreneurship (how to ship faster)

3) Philosophy with teeth

Not airy “future of humanity” fluff.

Real questions like:

  • What happens to identity when creativity becomes cheap?
  • How do we keep our taste sharp when outputs are infinite?
  • What does “authentic” mean in an era of synthetic text?
  • How do you stay sovereign in a world of persuasive machines?

4) Aesthetic + craft

AI content is often ugly.

I want the blog to feel like a dojo: clean, direct, powerful.

Words that hit.

Images that slap.

Design that disappears.

Because the best interface is the one that gets out of the way.

My operating system: how I will win

People don’t lose because they lack talent.

They lose because they lack systems.

Here’s mine.

1) Publish every day

Daily publishing isn’t a content strategy.

It’s a psychological weapon.

Because daily shipping does three things:

  • It kills perfectionism
  • It builds momentum
  • It forces truth through repetition

A post a day for a year is 365 reps.

Most people won’t do 30.

2) Build a “prompt gym”

I want a library of prompts that are actually useful—organized, tested, and improved.

Not “50 prompts to become a millionaire.”

Real prompts like:

  • “Help me write a sharper argument with fewer words.”
  • “Identify the hidden assumptions in this paragraph.”
  • “Give me three more extreme versions of this idea.”
  • “Turn this into a manifesto.”
  • “Challenge me: what’s the strongest counterargument?”

3) Write like a human with a pulse

My edge is not that I use AI.

My edge is that I use AI and still write with blood.

I want readers to feel that a person is behind the page:

a person who lifts, walks, thinks, sweats, laughs, obsesses.

4) Distribution like a thunderclap

The blog is the home.

But the ideas travel.

Every post becomes:

  • a short post
  • a quote
  • a thread
  • a newsletter
  • a talk
  • a PDF manifesto
  • a “how-to” mini guide

Same core idea. Multiple formats.

Because the world rewards repetition with variation.

My code of honor

If I’m going to be #1, I need rules.

  1. No fluff. If it doesn’t help the reader think or act, delete it.
  2. No fear marketing. I don’t sell panic. I sell power.
  3. No fake authority. If I don’t know, I say I don’t know—and I test.
  4. No hiding the process. I show my experiments, not just my conclusions.
  5. No waiting for permission. I publish first, refine second.
  6. No betrayal of taste. I’d rather be sharp than popular.

The real reason I want this

Let’s get honest.

I don’t just want to be #1 for ego.

I want to be #1 because it’s a worthy mountain.

Because the act of aiming that high forces you to evolve.

Because being #1 means you must:

  • think clearly
  • work relentlessly
  • stay humble enough to learn
  • stay bold enough to lead
  • keep your body strong
  • keep your mind sharp
  • keep your soul intact

This ambition isn’t “content.”

It’s character training.

The invitation

If you’re reading this and you feel that spark—good.

Here’s your challenge:

Don’t be an AI spectator.

Be an AI athlete.

Use it to:

  • write
  • build
  • learn
  • compress time
  • sharpen taste
  • create leverage
  • amplify your life

And I’ll do my part.

I’ll publish the reps.

I’ll document the journey.

I’ll test everything.

I’ll keep it raw, useful, and alive.

Because I’m not trying to be a “thought leader.”

I’m trying to be a force.

And my ambition is simple:

Become the #1 AI blogger on the planet—by making other people more powerful.

Let’s go.