30 Things I Want You to Know About AIA Father's Guide to Using Intelligence as Leverage-Without Losing Yourself Artificial Intelligence is changing the world your son is growing up in.The question is whether he will use it-or be shaped by it. 30 Things I Want You to Know About AI is written for fathers who want to prepare their sons for that world with clarity, discipline, and judgment-without handing them fear, dependency, or blind trust in technology. In this book, Sean Clark Christensen speaks father to son, offering practical wisdom on how to use AI as a tool for leverage while keeping responsibility, character, and independent thinking firmly intact. This is not a technical manual.It is not a hype book.And it is not about chasing trends that will disappear in a year. It is about teaching your son how to think in an AI-driven world. Across 30 short, focused lessons-designed to be read one per day-this book shows how AI can be used as: - A thinking partner, not a replacement for judgment- A personal assistant for organization, planning, and clarity- A learning tool that accelerates understanding without weakening discipline- A leverage system for creativity, problem-solving, and future income- A mirror that sharpens communication, restraint, and self-control Each day is structured to reinforce responsibility and reflection, including: The lessonKey points and rulesA clear purposeA guiding principleA practical mental modelA daily habitA simple exerciseA caution to keep perspectiveA reflection to lock in understandingA short quiz to ensure comprehension-not just consumption This book treats AI the way a father should teach anything powerful: As a tool-not an identity.As a multiplier-not a shortcut.As a discipline-not a crutch. 30 Things I Want You to Know About AI is written for fathers who want to equip their sons to move forward with confidence-without surrendering their ability to think, choose, and stand on their own. This is a book about judgment.About responsibility.About teaching your son to stay grounded in a world that increasingly encourages outsourcing thought. It isn't about raising a child who is smarter than machines.It's about raising a young man who stays human because of how he uses them.