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When Dom Versaci and Abella Bala can’t see eye to eye, the sweethearts tech advice from AI.
“ChatGPT has saved our relationship,” Bala, 36, an influencer talent manager from Los Angeles, told The Post.
“Until it takes Dom’s side,” she joked, adding that artificial intelligence has served as a handy “referee” in their disputes for the past six months.
Instead of staying stalemated on an issue, the millennials turn to the sophisticated system for support.
For just $20 per month for the premium package, ChatGPT helps the LA lovebirds better understand each other’s perspectives sans stress, strife or an intercessor in real life.
All they need is WiFi — and a little discernment, of course.
Once, during a particularly prickly rough patch, the bot suggested they “open up” their relationship to include additional lovers, a saucy suggestion the duo shut down post-haste. Then, it advocated for Bala to grant Versaci a “hall pass” of sorts, permitting him to date other women.
The questionable tips tickled the couple, causing them to forget what they were mad about in the first place.
“ChatGPT is weirdly helpful for de-escalating fights,” said Bala, “neither of us want to argue back and forth with a robot.”
Owing to the rise of generative AI — technology spurring advancements in physical health, education and beyond — these lovers claim that romance help is now only a few keyboard clicks away.
And indeed, the swing toward robo-therapy is picking up high speed among budget-conscious couples from coast to coast.
Rather than breaking the bank on therapy with a human — pricy appointments that can run NYCers more than $400 per session — twosomes are tapping chatbots to be their doc, inputting their problems and heeding the program’s output.
But, due to the novelty of the advent, ChatGPT is only capable of offering generic counsel, at best.
Ashley Williams, a licensed mental health counselor in New York, tells The Post it can serve as a useful “tool” for minor matters of the heart, especially in pairs hoping to improve their communication skills and conflict resolution strategies.
However, she warns that AI is not currently equipped to usurp the role of psychological professionals, people trained to address the specific, nuanced needs of individuals in a relationship.
“There’s not enough research [proving that ChatGPT’s advice] is reliable,” said Williams, who says entrusting robotics with your secrets could be risky. “How much of your personal information are you divulging to AI, and where is that information being stored?”
Her concerns notwithstanding, the high-wired hack for help is receiving high praise from experts due to its uncritical slant, 24-hour accessibility and low cost.
‘Therapy is expensive, and sometimes you just need a neutral third party to tell you who’s being insane.’
Dom Versaci
A February 2025 study by Hatch Data and Mental Health revealed that folks actually “favored” therapeutic tips from ChatGPT over the written advice of human healers. Research participants found the bot’s responses more “positive” than those from mere mortals.
Susan Albers, a psychologist for Cleveland Clinic, also lauded the large language model for offering quality aid in a pinch.
“Chatbot therapy might be useful to help you think through a response to a relationship concern or to respond to an awkward conversation,” Albers said in a recent report. “It is nonjudgmental and it is affordable.”
Those are two perks Versaci and Bala enjoy the most.
During their sessions with AI, Bala’s admitted to being “mean” and “blunt” — both to her boyfriend and to ChatGPT — in her delivery during arguments about her honey’s “bad” driving skills.
Versaci has confessed to being “emotionally manipulative” at times, namely because he feels he’s “never” at fault when they fall out over everyday issues like household chores.
Their automated arbiter often intercedes with generic relationship advice — rather than pearls of world-wide-web wisdom — such as: “Abella, maybe you could try softening your approach a bit … And Dom, it might help to practice acknowledging your part in situations. It’s all about finding that middle ground!”
Its thoughtful, impartial takes come as a comfort to the couple amid chaos.
“Therapy is expensive, and sometimes you just need a neutral third party to tell you who’s being insane,” Versaci, 29, a data scientist, told The Post. “ChatGPT is the cheapest, least judgmental option.”
Williamsburg resident Grace Mijoo, 35, agrees, admitting that she and boyfriend Eric, 40, routinely benefit from AI’s unbiased feedback — namely during conflicts over how often they check in with one another via text.
“I tell ChatGPT what’s going on between us, and we provide it with transcripts of what our conversations are like,” Mijoo, a self-love coach, explained. She chose not to share Eric’s full name for privacy purposes.
“In challenging moments, it really helps us take a step back, reflect and talk about what routine checking-ins through text mean to both of us,” said the Brooklynite.
Catherine Goetze, a tech pro from Los Angeles, known to her over 360,000 social media fans as “CatGPT,” also credits AI with keeping her relationship on track during small setbacks.
“My boyfriend and I had a huge argument over something extremely insignificant while we were out for dinner,” Goetze told The Post of a recent date-night fight.
“I went home, talked to ChatGPT and it said, ‘You were pretty hungry. You hadn’t eaten in an hour. You were just hangry,’” she recalled with a giggle.
Goetze and her beau quickly made up, thanks to the tech’s cheeky take.
The bot’s even come in handy for singles like Grace Clarke, who leaned on it during a recent breakup.
“I told ChatGPT to give me direct, specific and harsh feedback,” said Clarke, a 30-something from the West Village. She and her ex-fella, whose name she chose to withhold for privacy, called it quits in December after two years together.
In the name of self-improvement, she tasked the computerized counselor with offering up insights into her behaviors and repeated relationship patterns. And that it did — so much so, that the blond has virally lauded AI for being “a million times more helpful” than her human therapist amid the split.
Unfiltered in its approach, the automation pinpointed “unhealthy” habits and “obsessive” tendencies that could come up as pitfalls for Clarke, such as yelling or double-texting up a partner during disagreements.
ChatGPT also presented her with introspective exercises such as: “If you’re looking back on your breakup in a year, describe the type of person you’d want your ex to say you were [during the relationship and breakup].’”
It was a profound prompt that helped the millennial prioritize peace over problematic practices.
Clarke, a marketing strategist and founder of GraceAI, tells The Post she’s now healing and hopeful for the future.
“I feel very resilient,” she said. “I’m excited about my next partnership, even though it is a little strange getting advice from a machine.”