I Thought AI Would Make Me Lazy. It Made Me More Rigorous.

Dev.to / 5/1/2026

💬 OpinionIdeas & Deep AnalysisTools & Practical Usage

Key Points

  • The article argues that a common fear—that AI tools make users less capable—is misguided, because serious AI use can increase users’ rigor rather than reduce it.
  • Working through problems with AI creates an “accountability effect,” where the AI challenges weak reasoning and forces the user to consider alternatives before accepting answers.
  • The author improves thinking quality by adopting an “export habit,” saving meaningful AI conversations as a discipline that encourages intentional question-asking and deeper inquiry.
  • Using XWX AI Chat Exporter helps the author maintain a clean, revisitable PDF record with features like clickable table-of-contents for navigating key moments when the AI changed their mind.
  • The author concludes that the best use of AI is “thinking out loud” and preserving what was decided and why, then reviewing later to verify that the thinking was genuinely rigorous.

The common worry about AI tools is that they'll make us dumber. That if we let an AI do our thinking for us, we'll lose the ability to do it ourselves.

I thought the same thing. Then I started using AI seriously and noticed something unexpected: it made me more rigorous, not less.

The Accountability Effect

Here's what happened. When I'm working through a problem with AI, I can't just accept a half-baked answer. The AI will push back. It'll say "have you considered X?" or "that approach has a problem with Y." It's like having a patient colleague who never gets tired of your questions.

But the thing is — if I just let the conversation disappear after we're done, I lose all of that rigor. The insights, the corrections, the moments where I was wrong and had to rethink.

That's why I export every meaningful conversation. Not to avoid thinking — to capture the thinking that happened.

The Export Habit as a Thinking Discipline

Exporting forces you to decide: "was this conversation worth keeping?" That question alone makes you more intentional about how you use AI. You stop asking lazy questions and start having real conversations.

When you know a conversation might become part of your permanent record, you hold yourself to a higher standard. You ask better questions. You push deeper. You don't settle for the first answer.

The Tool

I use XWX AI Chat Exporter because it works across all the AI platforms I use and the PDF output is clean enough that I actually want to revisit it. The clickable table of contents is clutch for longer conversations — I can jump to the exact section where the AI changed my mind about something.

What Changed

Before AI: I thought through problems alone, made decisions, moved on.
After AI with export: I think through problems with AI, get challenged, refine my thinking, export the conversation, and have a permanent record of why I made each decision.

That second approach isn't lazier. It's more rigorous. More documented. More defensible.

The Counterintuitive Truth

Using AI well doesn't mean thinking less. It means thinking out loud — and keeping a record of what you thought. The people who get the most out of AI aren't the ones who let it do their work. They're the ones who use it to sharpen their own thinking, and then save the sharpened edge for later.

If you're worried AI is making you lazy, try this: export your conversations and review them a week later. If the conversation looks shallow, your questions were shallow. The record doesn't lie.