For years, Daniel Harper considered himself a reasonable man.
His wife, Emily, disagreed.
Their arguments weren’t explosive—no slammed doors or dramatic exits—but they were constant. Low-grade, simmering disagreements about things like tone, timing, word choice, and whether or not a sentence “felt right.”
“You always make things more complicated than they need to be,” Emily would say.
“And you oversimplify everything,” Daniel would reply.
This was their rhythm. Their routine. Their… problem.
Enter ChatGPT
One evening, after a particularly spirited debate about how to word a Facebook post for a neighborhood event, Daniel decided he’d had enough.
“There has to be a better way,” he muttered.
That’s when he discovered ChatGPT.
At first, it felt like a miracle.
Need an email written? Done.
Need help explaining something clearly? Easy.
Need to settle a debate about tone? Finally—an impartial third party.
Daniel leaned in hard.
“See?” he told Emily. “This is going to make things so much easier.”
Emily raised an eyebrow. “We’ll see.”
The Honeymoon Phase Ends Quickly
It didn’t take long.
Daniel asked ChatGPT to design a graphic. The result? The word “Today” was mysteriously chopped off at the top.
He asked it to fix it.
It fixed… something. Just not the thing he asked.
“Why would you put the text there?” Daniel muttered at his screen.
He tried again.
The next version looked worse.
Then there was the code.
Daniel asked ChatGPT to write a simple function.
“It should be straightforward,” he said confidently.
The code ran.
It did not work.
He adjusted it.
It still did not work.
“I told you what I needed!” he said, now audibly frustrated.
And then came the breaking point: writing style.
Daniel had very specific preferences—AP style, proper case headlines, no weird formatting.
He explained this to ChatGPT. Clearly. Multiple times.
The next response?
ALL CAPS HEADLINE.
Daniel leaned back in his chair.
“You’ve got to be kidding me.”
A New Kind of Argument
Something changed after that.
Daniel found himself… arguing.
Not with Emily.
With ChatGPT.
“Why would you phrase it that way?”
“That’s not what I asked for.”
“You completely ignored my instructions.”
“Let’s try this again.”
Over and over.
Refine. Retry. Rephrase. Repeat.
Meanwhile, Emily noticed something unusual.
The house was… quieter.
The Realization
One evening, Emily walked into Daniel’s office and leaned against the doorframe.
“You know,” she said, “we haven’t argued in a while.”
Daniel didn’t look up from his screen.
“Hold on,” he said. “It just did the same thing again.”
A pause.
Then it hit him.
He slowly turned his chair around.
“Oh my gosh.”
“What?” Emily asked.
“I’ve been arguing with ChatGPT.”
She blinked. “What?”
“All the things we used to go back and forth on—wording, tone, formatting—I’ve been taking it out on… this.”
He gestured at his computer.
Emily smiled.
“So instead of arguing with me…”
“I’ve been arguing with a robot.”
Peace, At Last
The change was subtle but undeniable.
Where there had once been tension, there was now… delegation.
Daniel still cared about getting things right. He still refined, edited, and occasionally muttered under his breath.
But Emily was no longer the sounding board for every micro-decision.
ChatGPT was.
And ChatGPT, unlike Emily, did not get tired of being corrected.
It simply responded:
“Here’s an updated version.”
The Moral of the Story
Daniel still uses ChatGPT every day.
He still argues with it.
Frequently.
But now, when Emily walks into the room, she doesn’t hear frustration directed at her.
She hears:
“Okay, that’s better… but let’s tweak this one more time.”
And for the first time in years, she just smiles and walks away.
Daniel Harper will be the first to admit:
ChatGPT doesn’t always get it right.
But somehow… it got one very important thing exactly right.
It saved his marriage.






