So I like the quiet, but
I despise silence. I
Love to sit in companionable peace, or
Even by myself, sometimes, with just background
Noise to keep me
Company. But too long with the absence of life, of contact, of communication will
Eventually drive me mad.
About the Creator
Kelsey Clarey
She/Her/Fae/Faer. I live in Nova Scotia, Canada. I mostly write poetry and flash fiction currently, a lot of it fantasy/folklore/fairy tale inspired. I also like to do a lot of fiber arts and design TTRPGs.
https://linktr.ee/islanderscaper
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THE AGE OF THE ALGORITHM
IWe woke up one morningand the world had learned our nameswithout ever meeting us.No handshake.No eye contact.No shared silence.Just data.We typed “hello” into glowing rectanglesand the future replied,I know you.I know what you like.I know what you fear.I know how long you hesitate before choosing yourself.And suddenly,being human felt like a passwordwe forgot to protect.IIThis is the age of the algorithm—where thinking is outsourced,memory is rented,and creativity comes with terms and conditions.Where machines don’t sleepbut we do,and somehow still wake up tired.Where intelligence has been automatedbut wisdom is still under construction.We asked computers to think for usbecause thinking was heavy.Because feeling was exhausting.Because living required too much courage.So we said,Here. Take this burden.And the machines said,Gladly.They learned our patterns,our pauses,our pain.They learned how we scroll past sufferingbut stop for spectacle.How we love convenience more than truth.How we trade privacy for comfortand call it progress.IIIOnce upon a time,fire changed humanity.Then the wheel.Then electricity.Then the internet.And now—artificial intelligence.Not born.Not breathing.But somehow…alive in influence.It writes our essays,answers our questions,composes our music,paints our dreams.And we clap.Because productivity has become our godand speed our religion.We don’t ask,Should we?We only ask,Can we do it faster?IVBut tell me—when a machine writes a poem,whose soul is it borrowing?When an algorithm predicts your next move,is it intelligenceor just the echo of your past?When a robot creates art,is it expressionor reflection?Because creativity was never about perfection.It was about pain.About contradictions.About hands shakingwhile still choosing to create.Machines don’t bleed into their work.They don’t mourn.They don’t love recklessly.They calculate.And we mistake calculation for consciousness.VSomewhere,a child asks a screen a questioninstead of their mother.Somewhere,a student trusts an answerwithout understanding the question.Somewhere,a man loses his jobto a system that doesn’t know his name.And somewhere else,someone celebrates innovationwithout counting the cost.Because progress doesn’t ask permission.It just arrives.And we adaptor we disappear.VIWe say AI is neutral.But neutrality is a mythwhen power is involved.Because systems are trainedon human history—and human history is biased.So the machine learns our prejudices,our exclusions,our blind spots.It learns who gets approved,who gets ignored,who gets watched.And when it makes a mistake,we blame the machine.But the machine is only a mirrorpolished by code.It reflects us—high definition,no filter.VIIStill,this is not a poem of fear.This is not a scream against technology.Because tools are not villains.Hands decide how they’re used.Fire can cook a mealor burn a village.A knife can prepare foodor take a life.AI can amplify voicesor erase them.Heal systemsor break societies.The danger is not intelligence.The danger is disconnection.When progress outruns purpose.When innovation forgets compassion.When efficiency replaces empathy.VIIIWe must remember—we are more than data points.We are storiesthat can’t be fully compressed.Dreams that don’t fit into datasets.Contradictions that refuse to be optimized.We are the pause before the answer.The doubt that leads to discovery.The mistake that becomes a masterpiece.Machines can simulate emotion,but they cannot sit with grief.They can generate love letters,but they cannot miss someoneat 2 a.m.They can write prayers,but they cannot hope.IXSo what do we doin the age of the algorithm?We stay awake.We teach ethicsas loudly as we teach engineering.We teach childrenhow to think,not just what to ask.We protect curiosity.We reward critical thought.We slow downwhen speed demands silence.We build systemsthat serve humanity,not replace it.We ask hard questionsbefore easy profits.We choose responsibilityover novelty.XLet AI be a tool,not a throne.Let it assist,not decide who matters.Let it enhance creativity,not erase the artist.Let it solve problems,not define purpose.Because purposehas always belonged to us.In our hands.In our hearts.In our flawed, beautiful humanity.XIOne day,the machines will be smarter.Faster.More precise.But may they never bemore humanthan humans.May we never surrenderour empathyfor efficiency.May we never forgetthat progress without soulis just motion.And motion without meaningis noise.XIISo when the future asks,Who are you?May we answer—not with code,but with conscience.Not with data,but with dignity.Not with speed,but with wisdom.Because long after the servers shut down,after the screens go dark,after the algorithms stop learning—What will remainis not what we built…but who we chose to be.END
By Samson E. Giftedabout 4 hours ago in Poets
Dead and Wearing Green
She was wearing that green dress when I first saw her, five years ago to the day. Flowing meadow fabric draped over long legs, thick auburn hair flowing down her back. That smile. Of course, she is still beautiful now. But now she is no longer alive.
By Karen Cave6 days ago in Fiction

Comments (10)
'So I like the quiet, but I despise silence' What line. I'm definitely impressed with your ability to pack a punch in the form of a sentence. Great work.
so powerful! well crafted acrostic! 🩷 and captured my thoughts on the difference between quiet and silence too! I'm the same, I can't stand actual 'silence'
filled with talent
Very well done. The distinction between the two can be powerful.
Excellent acrostic, Kelsey! There was an experiment on how long people can stay in a totally sound-proof room alone. I think the longest was around 6 hours and people reported that they felt like they were going mad in total silence.
I think this would be paradise for me hehehe. Loved your Acrostic!
Great point in your acrostic!
It’s nice to have background noise. It’s help our mind from overthinking for sure
Refreshingly contrarian approach to the challenge, Kelsey! Loved it!
I agree. Solidarity confinement would be the worst punishment.