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Blind Spots and AI: How Artificial Intelligence Reveals What You Can't See About Yourself

Blind spots are patterns about yourself that you genuinely can't see—not because you're avoiding the truth, but because your perspective is too close or shaped by assumptions you've never questioned. AI can identify these gaps by reflecting back contradictions, asking questions from an outside angle, and pattern-matching across many examples you've shared.

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Why It Matters

A blind spot is something about yourself that everyone else can see but you can't. Maybe you're defensive when people offer feedback. Maybe you take on way too much responsibility. Maybe you dismiss your own needs. You don't see it because you're too close to yourself. AI can help by reflecting patterns back to you.

Think of it like this: You look in a mirror and see your face. But you can't see the back of your head without a second mirror. AI works as that second mirror for your personality and patterns. It can't see your "back" either (it's still just an AI), but it can organize what you've told it into patterns you might have missed.

How AI Spots Your Blind Spots

You might spend weeks checking in with an AI about your relationships. You talk about conflicts, misunderstandings, hurt feelings. The AI (or you, reviewing the conversations) might notice: "In every example you've shared, you apologize immediately and take blame, even when it seems like the other person contributed to the problem." That's a blind spot—a pattern you couldn't see about yourself.

The AI isn't diagnosing you or telling you "you have people-pleasing issues." It's just reflecting the pattern: "Here's what I notice in what you've shared."

Why This Matters for Growth

You can't change what you can't see. If you don't notice you habitually minimize your own needs, you can't work on valuing yourself better. Once an AI helps you see the pattern, you have a choice: Do I actually like this about myself? Do I want to change it? What might change if I did?

Blind spots are often connected to wounds or survival strategies from earlier in your life. Seeing them isn't about judgment; it's about understanding yourself better.

The Limitation

AI can only reflect what you tell it. If you're in denial about something, or if you don't mention it, the AI won't spot it. Also, AI might notice patterns that aren't actually meaningful—it might see a correlation that's just random. That's why it's good to notice if a pattern the AI suggests *feels* true to you, not just to accept it automatically.

Try this: Do 1-2 weeks of regular check-ins with an AI about a specific area you're interested in—relationships, work, self-care, anxiety. Then ask: "Looking at our conversations, what patterns do you notice about how I approach this area?" See what emerges that you hadn't consciously realized about yourself.

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