Writers used to write. Data analysts used to process data. Designers used to design, teachers used to teach, and workers used to believe that skill was protection. But one day, a new force entered the room, silent, tireless, and unnervingly intelligent. It did not ask for a desk or a salary. It asked for relevance. Artificial intelligence had arrived, not as a tool, but as a quiet question: What happens to human purpose when the machine begins to think? Since then, workplaces have not merely evolved; they have trembled. The promise of AI-powered progress has been shadowed by an unspoken dread, AI anxiety, a distinctly modern form of fear that no algorithm can measure but nearly every worker can feel. It is not just the anxiety of job loss but the haunting suspicion that meaning itself

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