CONCEPT
Identity Grief (AI)
The specific form of loss in the AI transition that Kübler-Ross’s framework identifies as prior to and deeper than career grief—not the loss of a job or a skill but the dissolution of the self-story through which a lifetime of effort was organized and made meaningful.
The distinction that Kübler-Ross drew between grief for things and grief for identity is the distinction that the AI transition most urgently requires. Career grief—the loss of a job, a role, a set of responsibilities—can be addressed through conventional means: retraining, placement, counseling, the standard institutional machinery of workforce transition. Identity grief operates at a different level. It is the loss of the narrative that explained who you are, why your decades of effort mattered, what your life was organized around. The senior software architect who said he felt like “a master calligrapher watching the printing press arrive” had not lost his job. He had not lost his capability. He had lost his story. And you cannot retrain a story. You can only grieve the old one and, eventually, construct a new one. Identity grief in the AI transition is structurally distinct from other technological displacements because the loss
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