
The question underneath the question
Why high achievers feel this most acutely
What AI actually replicates — and what it does not
The Two Whys: separating what you do from why you do it
The identity question specific to professionals who moved countries
A more useful relationship with professional identity
What to do with this
About the creator
Ricky is the creator of Embracing Imperfection Academy, a digital education platform for professionals navigating perfectionism, anxiety, burnout, and life transitions.
A former Hong Kong professional now based in the UK, Ricky brings lived experience of high-pressure careers, cultural transition, and the quiet work of building a calmer life. His work is evidence-based, anti-hustle, and always grounded in the belief that calm is a competitive advantage — including in the age of AI.
A former Hong Kong professional now based in the UK, Ricky brings lived experience of high-pressure careers, cultural transition, and the quiet work of building a calmer life. His work is evidence-based, anti-hustle, and always grounded in the belief that calm is a competitive advantage — including in the age of AI.
Embracing Imperfection Academy offers courses, resources, and a membership community for professionals ready to navigate disruption with clarity rather than panic.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Can AI really threaten your professional identity?
Yes — but not by taking your job. AI threatens professional identity by producing outputs that resemble yours, which can create the impression that your expertise is being replicated. Research on AI identity threat at the workplace identifies two distinct concerns: changes to the content of work, and loss of professional standing — both of which are closer to meaning and value threats than to simple competence deficits. The threat is real. It is also often misunderstood — what AI replicates is output, not the judgement behind it.
Why do high achievers feel AI identity threat more acutely?
High achievers tend to have tightly integrated professional identities — their sense of self is closely bound to their competence, expertise, and professional standing. When a technology appears to replicate aspects of that competence, the identity disruption is proportionally greater. It is not a sign of fragility. It is the direct consequence of having invested deeply in becoming good at something.
What is the difference between 'Work Why' and 'Life Why'?
Your Work Why is your reason for doing the specific work you do — the problems it solves, the craft it involves, the contribution it makes within your field. Your Life Why is the broader reason you work at all — the values, relationships, and purpose that your work is meant to serve. When AI disrupts the Work Why, the Life Why often remains intact. Separating the two reveals that the identity threat is narrower than it first appears.
Is it unhealthy to tie your identity closely to your career?
It is common rather than pathological — particularly for professionals who have invested decades in a field. The challenge is not that identity and career are connected. It is that a career-dependent identity becomes vulnerable when the career changes. The goal is not to detach entirely from professional identity, but to ensure that the Life Why remains legible even when the Work Why is in flux.
How do I find meaning in my work when AI keeps changing what that work looks like?
Start with what remains constant when the tools change. What problems do you care about solving? Whose outcomes matter to you? What does doing this work well make possible — for others, for your organisation, for the people you serve? Those answers are the Life Why. They tend to be more durable than any particular set of methods or deliverables.
What should I do if I feel like AI has made my career meaningless?
That feeling is worth taking seriously — but also worth examining carefully. Meaninglessness in the face of AI disruption often reflects a conflation of output and purpose. The fact that AI can produce a version of your deliverable does not mean the purpose behind that deliverable has disappeared. It means the question of purpose needs to be examined more explicitly than before.
Is professional identity crisis the same as burnout?
They often co-occur but are distinct. Burnout is a state of exhaustion produced by sustained demands exceeding resources. Professional identity crisis is a destabilisation of the sense of self in relation to work. AI disruption can trigger both — burnout through increased demand and pace of change, identity crisis through the challenge to expertise and professional standing. Both benefit from different interventions.
Want to think more clearly about AI and your career?
The Compass Letter is a fortnightly note for professionals navigating AI disruption without the panic. Each issue offers one evidence-based perspective and one practical starting point — nothing more.
Join the early access waitlist for the AI Anxiety Reset programme
Join the early access waitlist for the AI Anxiety Reset programme
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Also exploring UK settlement?
Life in the UK: 20-Day Calm Sprint — for professionals preparing for UK settlement with calm confidence.
References
- Trittin-Ulbrich, H., et al. (2022). The rise of artificial intelligence — understanding the AI identity threat at the workplace. Electronic Markets, 32, 73–99. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12525-021-00496-x
- Dweck, C. S. (2006). Mindset: The New Psychology of Success. Random House.
- Frankfurt, H. G. (1986). On Bullshit. Raritan Quarterly Review, 6(2), 81–100. (Published as standalone book by Princeton University Press, 2005.)
- World Economic Forum. (2025). Future of Jobs Report 2025. World Economic Forum. https://www.weforum.org/publications/the-future-of-jobs-report-2025/
