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I Realized My Head Was Empty After Asking AI Everything

A developer realized they could not recall any questions they had asked AI that day, nor the reasoning behind their own directory structure, which they had offloaded entirely to AI. They identified this as cognitive offloading, where externalizing cognitive processes to AI led to an empty personal knowledge base. The developer now advocates for a shift from maximizing AI use to evolving alongside AI, emphasizing the need to re-internalize externalized information by summarizing and explaining it in one's own words.

read2 min views1 publishedJun 29, 2026

I couldn’t answer that question.

I ask it multiple times a day. Yet I couldn’t recall a single thing I asked today. I couldn’t remember what’s in my personal knowledge repository or why my current directory structure exists, or even how I manage it. The final blow was realizing that the reason I adopted that structure was simply because I had “offloaded research on AI-friendly directory structures entirely to AI”—I had no memory of why it was good or why I chose it.

I learned about something called cognitive off. Cognitive off refers to the act of externalizing cognitive processes—basically, relying on external aids like to-do lists or shopping memos. But lately, I’ve been externalizing not just to-do lists and shopping memos, but also online articles, search results, code snippets—absolutely everything. With AI added to the mix, the cost of externalization has effectively become zero.

As a result, two problems began to emerge:

Externalizing memories might have been acceptable, but when I outsourced even the organization of those externalized items to AI, I fell into a mindset of “I’ll just ask AI when I need it.” Because of that, I no longer grasp what’s in my notes or articles, nor even what I externalized. In the end, I feel it’s all wasted.

The essence is not about externalizing and managing memories. Instead, I now believe what matters is:

How efficiently can I cram externalized information back into my own brain?

I feel we need to move from the phase of “using AI to the max” to the phase of “evolving alongside AI.” I thought, “I don’t need to remember things myself because AI can read and retrieve massive amounts of information.” But that made my brain empty—and then I wondered: would others find human value in someone like that? I’m not good at talking about myself, so writing this article is truly painful. Maybe that’s because I, as a person, am empty.

From now on, instead of building a harness (a system) for storing and organizing using AI agents, I want to build a harness for storing, chewing, and re-storing. By “chewing,” I mean summarizing in my own words and explaining. In short, I need to use my own brain more. This is still at the hypothesis stage; whether it works remains to be tested. I also plan to leave logs of my hypothesis testing and thought process.

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