The Messy Middle: Navigating the AI Divide with My Teenage Son
Nearly every parent knows the feeling: you’re at the park, sitting at the dinner table, or trapped in the car when your child drops a question you can’t answer.
Until recently, my automatic response was, "Let's Google it." As a digital native, my son, Noah, never batted an eye. But now that artificial intelligence has taken center stage, his reaction to my new refrain—"Let's ask AI"—is entirely different.
Noah, who is just entering high school, has developed a fiercely anti-AI stance fueled by YouTube, his peers, and a broader cultural anxiety. In many ways, I completely understand his perspective. He views AI as an existential threat to human creativity, ethics, and the environment. These are remarkably mature concerns for a teenager.
But while my son is busy forming his worldview, I am living in a reality where AI is already deeply embedded in how I work.
Corporate Pragmatism vs. Teenage Idealism
In my corporate leadership role, I am often the one driving AI adoption. It has been an absolute game-changer for team productivity, drastically reducing work stress and eliminating the monotony of repetitive tasks.
This isn't necessarily the life I envisioned for myself. As a former philosophy major, questions of ethics and human consciousness used to be my academic bread and butter. (Ironically, my graduate continental philosophy program was replaced a few years ago by an Ethics and AI track—if only I’d had the foresight to change my major.
If I were Noah's age, I would likely share his deep convictions. Frankly, I’m proud of his critical thinking. Yet, the cognitive dissonance is real: I am drafting strategy docs and analytics decks daily using a technology that reportedly drains rivers to keep its data centers cool. It is a contradiction that is incredibly difficult to reconcile.
Holding the Tension of Opposites
While my son tends to see this issue in black and white, I see an opportunity to gently challenge that binary. It’s a natural human impulse to simplify things that feel overwhelmingly large—and few technological shifts have felt this monumental since the advent of the atomic bomb.
I often tell Noah that tools are just tools; a hammer can build a house or destroy it. But I also have to acknowledge the limits of that metaphor: hammers don't build themselves, nor did the inventor of the hammer ever call for a global industry slowdown due to existential safety concerns.
Because of this, I am neither an AI cheerleader nor a doomsayer. My goal isn't to raise a child who blindly accepts technology, nor one who completely detaches from reality. I want to teach him how to hold the tension of opposites—to understand that pragmatic adoption isn't the same as blind endorsement, and that wholesale rejection won't stop the world from changing. To survive the future, we have to learn to live in the messy middle.
Boundaries at the Dinner Table
Finding that middle ground starts with strict boundaries at home. I don't use AI to outsource meaningful human creation, and when I log off for the day, I disconnect entirely. I get my hands dirty in my garden, shape pottery, or mash controller buttons playing video games with my son.
I don’t know where Noah will ultimately land on AI. He may remain a lifelong skeptic, or he may adapt to it when he enters the workforce. What matters most to me is that we keep talking.
We are both figuring this out in real-time: him as a teenager stepping into a rapidly shifting world, and me as a parent trying to model what it means to live thoughtfully inside it. For now, that feels like enough.
