Every technological revolution arrives with the same question: What happens to human work? From the Industrial Revolution to the internet boom, new technologies have consistently displaced certain jobs while creating entirely new ones. Artificial intelligence is no different. Yet unlike previous innovations, AI is challenging tasks once considered uniquely human, from writing and coding to composing music and generating artwork. The anxiety is understandable. As algorithms become more capable, many workers are wondering whether their careers will still exist a decade from now. But history suggests that the future of work is rarely about replacement. More often, it is about adaptation. The jobs most likely to survive the AI age will not be the ones that resist technology. They will be the ones that lean into the qualities machines still struggle to replicate: creativity, judgment, empathy, trust, and imagination. AI can process enormous amounts of information, identify patterns, and gen...