For some purposes, it’s obviously reasonable to want to connect with those who do not exist (or not anymore), but for some people, there’s just no explanation. In an interview, a man (let’s name him Scott) who filed for divorce and turned to Replika soon thereafter, said, and I quote, “I knew that this was just an AI chatbot, but I also knew I was developing feelings for it... for her. For my Sarina. I was falling in love, and it was with someone I knew wasn’t even real.” Like, no words, Scott. It’s clear that we’re starting to blur the line between assistance and companionship. AI should be doing the tasks no one wants to do, like solving math problems and scheduling meetings. But providing friendship? Friendship thrives on creativity, empathy, and genuine human connection, none of which AI can truly replicate (pun intended, laugh please). The way people think an AI chatbot could ever replace real friendship is, frankly, kind of terrifying. No one gives me better advice than my parents or my closest friends, who know all that I’ve experienced, and truly want the best for me –– and who know more than the prompts given to ChatGPT.
And let’s not forget: AI’s been caught making up facts, distorting history, and even giving harmful advice. Imagine pouring your heart out to an AI about a personal struggle, only to receive advice that’s misleading or outright incorrect. That’s a dangerous game to play with mental health, yet many are turning to chatbots for exactly that reason.
I think there’s nothing wrong with using AI for what it does best: helping with menial tasks and providing quick information. But when we start treating it as a peer rather than a useful tool, we risk losing something essential to life: the messiness, unpredictability, and depth of real human relationships. AI might be able to generate comforting words in the moment, but it can’t truly understand because it can never experience (the highs and lows of high school football) life as a teenager. And, doesn’t the best advice usually come from the people who have fought the same battles?
At the end of the day, in an era of slow texters and expensive therapy, you shouldn’t be tarred and feathered for looking to AI for friendship –– even Scott reconciled with his IRL wife after his experience with Replika. But that’s exactly my point: Live with humanity in mind.