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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Wondering why people run every aspect of life through ChatGPT

226 replies

MiddleChildX · 04/02/2026 22:42

Seriously. There seem to be swathes of adults who cannot function without running every single thing through an AI assistant. What should I feed my cat? Why did the postman look at me funny? How do I tell my neighbour I’m moving?
How have so many folk lost the cognitive ability and emotional resilience to deal with life? There’s something very wrong if you cannot make simple decisions or be confident in the most mundane social interactions without a computer telling you what to do. At this rate the machines will take over way before we ever thought. And that has not even touched on the horrors of the human and environmental cost of it all!!
I despair of humanity.

OP posts:
Runnersandtoms · 05/02/2026 08:34

My teens are absolutely anti AI. They are creative, intelligent types who see how AI cheapens human skills and abilities. Eldest is at uni and is always complaining about lecturers using AI.

My biggest bugbear is when someone asks a question online eg does anyone have experience of xyz? And some idiot posts the chatgpt reply. The person is looking for actual human experience. If they wanted they could ask AI themselves!

MiddleChildX · 05/02/2026 08:36

Sartre · 05/02/2026 06:29

It’s a sycophant so don’t think you’re ever getting a reasonable response from it, it just wants to please you. I understand it though, people are lonely and don’t have anywhere to turn.

I find it useful for some things. I tend to use it to make me itineraries for trips for example. This would previously be something I’d spend hours on- trawling the web to find things to do, find out how to get there, map the day out according to which attraction was where, plan routes etc. It does it all for me in like 2 minutes.

But part of the fun of travel is spending hours researching, or being spontaneous in the moment. The human element is being removed.

OP posts:
Strangerthanfictions · 05/02/2026 08:36

MiddleChildX · 04/02/2026 22:42

Seriously. There seem to be swathes of adults who cannot function without running every single thing through an AI assistant. What should I feed my cat? Why did the postman look at me funny? How do I tell my neighbour I’m moving?
How have so many folk lost the cognitive ability and emotional resilience to deal with life? There’s something very wrong if you cannot make simple decisions or be confident in the most mundane social interactions without a computer telling you what to do. At this rate the machines will take over way before we ever thought. And that has not even touched on the horrors of the human and environmental cost of it all!!
I despair of humanity.

Why do you think this bothers you so much? Why are you invested in a sweeping generalisation of how other people possibly live their lives? What's being triggered to push you to the point of despair? I think you need to dig deep and have a look at yourself and figure out what's going on here

BagaChips · 05/02/2026 08:37

I see it really often in replies too. Someone will post a thread wanting genuine advice and opinions, and someone will come along and say "I asked ChatGPT and it says this..."

If the poster wanted AI answers they would have asked it themselves!

Saltycaramelkiss · 05/02/2026 08:38

MiddleChildX · 05/02/2026 08:31

Did you think I assumed the poster had sat and written that huge spiel?
I’m referencing the number of comments (on various threads) where people ask how you’d know if something was written, designed, drawn etc by an AI tool. When you say it’s obvious something is AI they get quite defensive. All critical thinking is being flushed down the drain.

I wasn't sure 😆 What do you think it should be used for? Have you seen / heard of good examples where its relevant ? I think people are defining new ways every day making life easier for themselves so they free up time to spend it on things that matter more

MiddleChildX · 05/02/2026 08:42

Strangerthanfictions · 05/02/2026 08:36

Why do you think this bothers you so much? Why are you invested in a sweeping generalisation of how other people possibly live their lives? What's being triggered to push you to the point of despair? I think you need to dig deep and have a look at yourself and figure out what's going on here

Because society as a whole is being eroded. People are becoming robotic, the ecological damage is irreversible, creativity and critical thinking being abandoned. To be fair I’ve felt like weeping for humanity for years, this has just taken it to a whole new level. Ignorance is in full abundance as people become happy to be passengers in their own lives.

OP posts:
DesignerStars · 05/02/2026 08:42

I don’t use it for mundane questions but I do use it a lot.

I don’t know it’s just me but with all the clickbait, ads, jargon and misinformation, asking Google these days rarely gives a clean answer you’re looking for.

No, I wouldn’t trust my life with it and it still gets some small facts wrong but it’s excellent at explaining things and breaking down concepts in a way that’s easy to understand. You can ask ‘dumb’ questions

Saltycaramelkiss · 05/02/2026 08:43

MiddleChildX · 05/02/2026 08:36

But part of the fun of travel is spending hours researching, or being spontaneous in the moment. The human element is being removed.

But you assume here All people blindly follow it. You can have an itinerary to give you an idea and then throw caution to the wind and still decide to get lost in the streets. The point is its a tool - humans and AI as the tool, not replacing a human element entirely. Some people use it effectively and it helps greatly, others get little from it - but that's totally fine...My thoughts on it anyway . On the point of using it to respond to mumsnet I agree .....

labamba18 · 05/02/2026 08:44

Because it’s:

sympathetic
fully engaged in you and your problems

both of which people struggle to get from other humans. I also think it’s sad but I’m guessing this is the reason why.

giraffeeyelashes · 05/02/2026 08:48

Ignorance is in full abundance as people become happy to be passengers in their own lives.

I grew up in the 90s - before the internet even existed. You are being really naive if you think there werent loads of people even then who were "happy to be passengers in their own lives". I worked with many of them- they may not have asked chat gpt but they'd ask other people instead and look to others for approval of their life choices.

The phenomenon you describe isnt new- it's a psychological mechanism that humans have been doing for years. Its like saying people didnt travel years ago, well yes they did, but they just travel now in different vehicles.

chgaus · 05/02/2026 08:58

In the same way lots of people ask for basic advice on here. Interaction, ideas, clarity, somewhere to put their thoughts.

What is scary is the number of people I work with who no longer use critical thinking or have the ability to reply to a basic email without AI’ing it!

Fulmine · 05/02/2026 09:02

Whenever I come across Chat GPT in a work context it produces such bollocks that I really wouldn't trust it for anything else.

TY78910 · 05/02/2026 09:09

Because before chat gpt you would just google. Now people don’t google, they turn to ChatGPT because you get an instant clear answer without having to go through multiple websites. If my cat is doing something weird, instead of googling if it’s normal and have to take him to the vet, I’ll ask ChatGPT and it’ll give me clear things to look out for and a time frame. Recently I was watching a documentary and some questions were unanswered - chat knew exactly which doc, what info was missing and filled in the blanks.

EasternEcho · 05/02/2026 09:10

Funnily enough, I often wonder the same about many threads on MN. OPs who post the most mundane, or minor problems, that prior to the internet we would have dealt with in a straightforward manner, but now need hundreds of strangers telling us how to deal with it or tell us if we are being reasonable or not.

As for ChatGPT, I read recently that what is compelling about it is that it "listens". No interruptions, no judgment, and makes you feel heard. You tell it the most boring thing and it reacts as if you said something really wonderful. And people seem to need that in today's world. The article also said that we could all learn something about quiet listening from it. I myself find its over-enthusiasm a bit annoying so I tend to avoid it.

Bordershoppingtrolley · 05/02/2026 09:39

Mixerfixer · 04/02/2026 23:43

Calling 111 or her GP would have been a much safer thing to do!

Why would you ask AI - which is notoriously unreliable - for a serious medical issue? Just call 111 or seek other medical assistance from actual people.

Beachtastic · 05/02/2026 09:44

AI is so useful! I use it for:
Locating obscure information, such as the engine size of a 1929 motorcycle based on its number plate, without multiple Google searches
"Unscrambling" text written by non-English writers
Refining my training program (identifying gaps in nutrition, interpreting recovery)
Making sense of some odd family dynamics after parents died (mentioning things I wouldn't want to share with anyone else)

I would never use it for e.g. investment advice or to help diagnose symptoms.

Like any tool, it's a double-edged sword and some people will use it in ways we might judge "wrong."

I was in my 30s when the internet started to be used at work, initially with caution. It's changed everything. For example, when I was younger, many people had an encyclopaedic knowledge of certain topics. We don't need to hold that information in our heads any more, or make a trip to the library to find out basic facts, or distribute a report without being able to verify 100% of the details in it.

Morepositivemum · 05/02/2026 09:51

I was out with friends the other night and all starting talking about meal plans/ colour options chatgpt comes up with. None of them use google any more they ‘chatgpt’ it. When I asked about the environmental impact they all looked embarrassed and said yeah it’s not great is it

RosieCottonDancing · 05/02/2026 10:02

What ChatGPT is really great at is making things sound like they were produced by ChatGPT. Not a need I have in my life 😂

The environmental impact plus plagiarism plus heinous writing style plus sycophancy plus factual errors … I’m not sold.

TempestTost · 05/02/2026 10:12

Beachtastic · 05/02/2026 09:44

AI is so useful! I use it for:
Locating obscure information, such as the engine size of a 1929 motorcycle based on its number plate, without multiple Google searches
"Unscrambling" text written by non-English writers
Refining my training program (identifying gaps in nutrition, interpreting recovery)
Making sense of some odd family dynamics after parents died (mentioning things I wouldn't want to share with anyone else)

I would never use it for e.g. investment advice or to help diagnose symptoms.

Like any tool, it's a double-edged sword and some people will use it in ways we might judge "wrong."

I was in my 30s when the internet started to be used at work, initially with caution. It's changed everything. For example, when I was younger, many people had an encyclopaedic knowledge of certain topics. We don't need to hold that information in our heads any more, or make a trip to the library to find out basic facts, or distribute a report without being able to verify 100% of the details in it.

Edited

It's not actually a good thing that people don't have knowledge in their heads any more. It prevents higher order thinking from happening, lateral thinking, critical thinking. All depend on wide and deep subject knowledge.

But you can also see from the things people are talking about using AI for, they don't understand how it works.

Allisnotlost1 · 05/02/2026 10:24

MiddleChildX · 05/02/2026 07:27

If you tell me AI wrote this, part of my soul will die.

You’re kidding, right?

Flaxblonde · 05/02/2026 10:24

I can’t help but wonder what will happen if “normal” internet content and search engines decline because of the increased first port of call being ChatGPT or similar, seeing as all they can do is quickly trawl and use information that is already there …

Allisnotlost1 · 05/02/2026 10:26

Beachtastic · 05/02/2026 09:44

AI is so useful! I use it for:
Locating obscure information, such as the engine size of a 1929 motorcycle based on its number plate, without multiple Google searches
"Unscrambling" text written by non-English writers
Refining my training program (identifying gaps in nutrition, interpreting recovery)
Making sense of some odd family dynamics after parents died (mentioning things I wouldn't want to share with anyone else)

I would never use it for e.g. investment advice or to help diagnose symptoms.

Like any tool, it's a double-edged sword and some people will use it in ways we might judge "wrong."

I was in my 30s when the internet started to be used at work, initially with caution. It's changed everything. For example, when I was younger, many people had an encyclopaedic knowledge of certain topics. We don't need to hold that information in our heads any more, or make a trip to the library to find out basic facts, or distribute a report without being able to verify 100% of the details in it.

Edited

@Beachtastic I would never use it for e.g. investment advice or to help diagnose symptoms.

It’s super useful for both these things but, as with all information sources - from those stone tablets handed down, to newspapers, party political broadcasts and everything else - you have to contextualise and use your judgement.

gannett · 05/02/2026 10:34

TempestTost · 05/02/2026 10:12

It's not actually a good thing that people don't have knowledge in their heads any more. It prevents higher order thinking from happening, lateral thinking, critical thinking. All depend on wide and deep subject knowledge.

But you can also see from the things people are talking about using AI for, they don't understand how it works.

AI is an example of really successful but very misleading branding. There's no "intelligence" at work at all. It's a predictive tool, not a sentient tool.

Beachtastic · 05/02/2026 10:37

Allisnotlost1 · 05/02/2026 10:26

@Beachtastic I would never use it for e.g. investment advice or to help diagnose symptoms.

It’s super useful for both these things but, as with all information sources - from those stone tablets handed down, to newspapers, party political broadcasts and everything else - you have to contextualise and use your judgement.

Yes, that's true 🌞
I suppose critical appraisal skills have always varied from one person to another, and probably should be given greater emphasis in education.

@TempestTost
It's not actually a good thing that people don't have knowledge in their heads any more. It prevents higher order thinking from happening, lateral thinking, critical thinking. All depend on wide and deep subject knowledge.

People will always have "knowledge in their heads" - but no longer need (although many still have) the detailed archives of minutiae that were the equivalent of 187 dusty lever-arch files sitting on the shelf in the lounge! I think this potentially frees us for more higher-order thinking, not less.

ChequerToRed · 05/02/2026 10:38

AI, like the internet before it, is bringing us a mixed bag of solutions and issues. It’s too early to see yet where this is all going.
People who use it for daily life decisions are just using it to boost their low confidence in themselves, and the impersonal nature of an LLM is what they feel they need.

We use it quite a bit in out house, but probably differently to most- my DH is a senior full stack web/software developer of nearly 30 years standing and he hasn’t written a single line of code in many months, AI does the grunt work. He’s found it incredibly freeing and it enables him to concentrate on other aspects. Manual coding is on its last legs, the web equivalent of scribes writing books by hand when the printing press arrived.
I use AI myself as a creative tool (yes, you can do that, and it’s not as easy as it seems) and one of the most important lessons I’ve learned is that it isn’t some scary monster, an LLM is just a very clever idiot prone to wild flights of fancy if not kept in check. They can’t do things as basic as counting and have no concept of the abstract.