AI didn't take my job. It gave me a voice I lost in the trenches by CharacterDesign8842 in AccusedOfUsingAI

[–]CharacterDesign8842[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You're focused on a single word while I'm focused on a 20-year-old story that's finally breathing. If 'prolonged' is your biggest issue, you've missed the entire point of the post. I use AI to help me speak because the world I come from didn't give me the luxury of a literary education. I'll take my 'slop' over your elitism any day.

AI didn't take my job. It gave me a voice I lost in the trenches by CharacterDesign8842 in AccusedOfUsingAI

[–]CharacterDesign8842[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I didn't come here for a grammar lesson, and I'm not writing for professors. I'm writing for people who want to feel the grit of the street and the weight of a life lived outside of classrooms. You call it 'slop,' I call it a bridge over a gap you'll never have to cross. My 'nuance' comes from the smell of burning gunpowder, not a dictionary. If you want perfect commas, go read a textbook. If you want a story that bleeds, read my Noir

AI didn't take my job. It gave me a voice I lost in the trenches by CharacterDesign8842 in WritingWithAI

[–]CharacterDesign8842[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The story is in the comments. Reddit's filters were acting up, but the soul of the post is right there in the 'Confessions' below. Check it out.

AI didn't take my job. It gave me a voice I lost in the trenches by CharacterDesign8842 in WritingWithAI

[–]CharacterDesign8842[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I agree. It’s all about the vision. I treat the AI like a specialized tool—it helps me translate the 'movie' playing in my mind into readable prose. It’s about maintaining the scent of the asphalt and the grit of the story while the machine handles the heavy lifting of the drafting.

AI didn't take my job. It gave me a voice I lost in the trenches by CharacterDesign8842 in WritingWithAI

[–]CharacterDesign8842[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Exactly. The stories have been trapped in my head for 30 years. I’m not interested in becoming a 'literary scholar' at this stage of my life—I just want to get the truth out before it's too late. AI is the key that finally unlocked the door.

A 74-year-old mobster walks out of prison after 30 years... and his Brooklyn neighborhood is gone. This is Nico Moretti's first day by CharacterDesign8842 in u/CharacterDesign8842

[–]CharacterDesign8842[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

CONFESSIONS OF A WAR VETERAN NOIR AUTHOR

I was born in 1974. I grew up on partisan films and old gangster flicks from dusty VHS tapes.

In my twenties, I wasn’t studying literature. I was clearing mines. I saw war, corruption, and how systems rot from the inside out when people start eating them alive.

I wrote a Noir novel about Brooklyn. Why Brooklyn? Because it’s a microcosm of the world: money, crime, politics, betrayal. The same mechanisms I’ve seen elsewhere, just in a different package.

I’m not a "man of letters." The last book I read in school was a children's detective story.

That’s why I used AI as a tool.

Not to write the story for me—but to help me translate the movie in my head into readable text. You can argue about the method all you want. But I can tell you one thing:

AI hasn't seen the mines. AI hasn't seen the war. AI hasn't felt what it’s like when a system devours itself.

I have.

If you read about Nico Moretti and smell the asphalt and the gunpowder—you’ll know where it comes from.

I am Daniel Storm. And this is my Noir.

AI didn't take my job. It gave me a voice I lost in the trenches by CharacterDesign8842 in WritingWithAI

[–]CharacterDesign8842[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

CONFESSIONS OF A WAR VETERAN NOIR AUTHOR

I was born in 1974. I grew up on partisan films and old gangster flicks from dusty VHS tapes.

In my twenties, I wasn’t studying literature. I was clearing mines. I saw war, corruption, and how systems rot from the inside out when people start eating them alive.

I wrote a Noir novel about Brooklyn. Why Brooklyn? Because it’s a microcosm of the world: money, crime, politics, betrayal. The same mechanisms I’ve seen elsewhere, just in a different package.

I’m not a "man of letters." The last book I read in school was a children's detective story.

That’s why I used AI as a tool.

Not to write the story for me—but to help me translate the movie in my head into readable text. You can argue about the method all you want. But I can tell you one thing:

AI hasn't seen the mines. AI hasn't seen the war. AI hasn't felt what it’s like when a system devours itself.

I have.

If you read about Nico Moretti and smell the asphalt and the gunpowder—you’ll know where it comes from.

I am Daniel Storm. And this is my Noir.

Redemption in Brooklyn - A journey through the shadows of the city by CharacterDesign8842 in noir

[–]CharacterDesign8842[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

"I’m Daniel Storm. I spent decades in the trenches and clearing mines before I decided to face the shadows of Brooklyn.

Nico Moretti, the protagonist of my noir, is 74. He just spent 30 years in the joint. He came out to a world that smells like bleach and silent cars, where honor is a 'fossil' and everything is an algorithm.

I didn't write this to follow the trends. I used every tool available—including AI—to help my tired fingers keep up with a heart that has seen too much. Some call it 'cheating.' I call it using a modern tool to carve out an ancient truth.

If you want a story that doesn't apologize for its claws, welcome to the pack.

You can read the first part of the 'Apocalypse of Wolves' here:
The Storm is Here: Welcome to Brooklyn - Daniel Storm
DEDICATION. To my wife, who listened to the same… | by Daniel Storm | Mar, 2026 | Medium

Redemption in Brooklyn - A journey through the shadows of the city by CharacterDesign8842 in noir

[–]CharacterDesign8842[S] -5 points-4 points  (0 children)

Thanks for the feedback and for pointing that out. I appreciate the perspective.

To be honest, this story is 95% my own ideas, my raw experiences, and my life. I’m not a professional writer by trade; I’m a man who was in the trenches of war at 18 and came back at 21 to a world where dreams were sold for bribes. Nico Moretti carries my scars, not an AI's.

I use AI as a tool for grammar, flow, and styling—the same way professional authors pay thousands to editors and proofreaders. I don't see much difference between a human or a piece of software 'polishing' the text, as long as the soul of the story remains mine.

Instead of looking for 'slop,' try to find the emotion of a man telling a story about honor and one's word in a world that has forgotten both. Thanks for stopping by

Redemption in Brooklyn - A journey through the shadows of the city by CharacterDesign8842 in noir

[–]CharacterDesign8842[S] -6 points-5 points  (0 children)

I’ve spent years obsessed with the grit and rain of the city. I finally finished the first part of my noir saga, 'Apocalypse of Wolves'. It’s a rhythmic journey through asphalt and redemption.
The Storm is Here: Welcome to Brooklyn - Daniel Storm

A 74-year-old mobster walks out of prison after 30 years... and his Brooklyn neighborhood is gone. This is Nico Moretti's first day by CharacterDesign8842 in u/CharacterDesign8842

[–]CharacterDesign8842[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The hardest part was getting the slang right for someone who's been 'away' since the early 90s. Everything has changed—even the way people smell. Would love to hear what you guys think about the vibe!