How AI-Brained Are You, Actually?
ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini... can't tell if you should ask AI or just text a friend? Six levels of AI dependence — from full analog to full cyborg.
Yeah I Like Being Alone, But Like... How Much?

Extrovert 20%, Introvert 80% — Alone time isn't loneliness — it's output. After being around people, you genuinely need a few days of solo recovery to return to yourself. But what comes out of that solitude has a density that's hard to replicate. Read a whole book, make something, go deep on what you love — a weekend like that leaves you more energized, not less. Ask "what did you do this weekend?" and the answer is complicated to explain quickly. The truth is, you're actually living one of the richest lives out there.
Your person has to genuinely respect your alone time. Not texting every hour doesn't mean you don't care — the right partner knows that without being told. You come across as mysterious at first, but the longer someone knows you, the more they realize how real and layered you actually are. You get more interesting over time, which makes you unforgettable to people who stick around.
Give you a solo project to go deep on and the output quality goes through the roof. Writing, development, research, design — fields that let you fully immerse on your own are where you actually shine. In the zone before a deadline, you produce work that's more concentrated than most teams. You'd rather be recognized for what you deliver than applauded at group dinners.
Instruments, equipment, software, supplies — you spend freely on what lets you create and do what you love. Your solo time needs to be high quality, so investing in that quality is just logical. From the outside it might look excessive. You already know it's your quality of life. You go fully in on the things you love, and the results are never average.