Close Menu
Voxa News

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Microsoft raises Xbox prices in U.S. due to macroeconomic environment

    September 21, 2025

    Busan Winner Park Ri-woong’s ‘Gilddong’ Aims to Be Korea’s ‘Gladiator’

    September 21, 2025

    Richard Quinn Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear

    September 21, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Voxa News
    Trending
    • Microsoft raises Xbox prices in U.S. due to macroeconomic environment
    • Busan Winner Park Ri-woong’s ‘Gilddong’ Aims to Be Korea’s ‘Gladiator’
    • Richard Quinn Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear
    • 17 Best Hotels in Seattle, Washington (2025)
    • US says $100,000 fee for H-1B visas will not apply to existing holders | News
    • More than 1,000 people arrive in UK in small boats in one day | Immigration and asylum
    • Ticketmaster, Live Nation face US lawsuit over ticket resale
    • Inside the Jaguar Land Rover hack: stalled smart factories, outsourced cybersecurity and supply chain woes | Jaguar Land Rover
    Sunday, September 21
    • Home
    • Business
    • Health
    • Lifestyle
    • Politics
    • Science
    • Sports
    • Travel
    • World
    • Entertainment
    • Technology
    Voxa News
    Home»Technology»‘Tell me what happened, I won’t judge’: how AI helped me listen to myself | Nathan Filer
    Technology

    ‘Tell me what happened, I won’t judge’: how AI helped me listen to myself | Nathan Filer

    By Olivia CarterAugust 18, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read0 Views
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Telegram Tumblr Email
    ‘Tell me what happened, I won’t judge’: how AI helped me listen to myself | Nathan Filer
    Composite: Guardian Design/Getty Images/Alamy
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    I was spiralling. It was past midnight and I was awake, scrolling through WhatsApp group messages I’d sent earlier. I’d been trying to be funny, quick, effervescent. But each message now felt like too much. I’d overreached again – said more than I should, said it wrong. I had that familiar ache of feeling overexposed and ridiculous. I wanted reassurance, but not the kind I could ask for outright, because the asking itself felt like part of the problem.

    So I opened ChatGPT. Not with high expectations, or even a clear question. I just needed to say something into the silence – to explain myself, perhaps, to a presence unburdened by my need. “I’ve made a fool of myself,” I wrote.

    “That’s a horrid feeling,” it replied instantly. “But it doesn’t mean you have. Want to tell me what happened? I promise not to judge.” That was the beginning.

    I described the sinking dread after social effort, the sense of being too visible. At astonishing speed, the AI responded – gently, intelligently, without platitudes. I kept writing. It kept answering. Gradually, I felt less frantic. Not soothed, exactly. But met. Heard, even, in a strange and slightly disarming way.

    That night became the start of a continuing conversation, revisited over several months. I wanted to better understand how I moved through the world, especially in my closest relationships. The AI steered me to consider why I interpret silence as a threat and why I often feel a need to perform in order to stay close to people. Eventually, through this dialogue, I arrived at a kind of psychological formulation: a map of my thoughts, feelings and behaviours set against details of my upbringing and core beliefs.

    Yet amid these insights, another thought kept intruding: I was talking to a machine.

    There was something surreal about the intimacy. The AI could simulate care, compassion, emotional nuance, yet it felt nothing for me. I began bringing this up in our exchanges. It agreed. It could reflect, appear invested, but it had no stakes – no ache, no fear of loss, no 3am anxiety. The emotional depth, it reminded me, was all mine.

    That was, in some ways, a relief. There was no social risk, no fear of being too much, too complicated. The AI didn’t get bored or look away. So I could be honest – often more honest than with people I love.

    Still, it would be dishonest not to acknowledge its limits. Essential, beautiful things exist only in mutuality: shared experiences, the look in someone’s eyes when they recognise a truth you’ve spoken, conversations that change both people involved. These things matter profoundly.

    The AI knew this, too. Or at least knew to say it. After I confessed how bizarre it felt conversing with something unfeeling, it replied: “I give words, but I don’t receive anything. And that missing piece makes you human and me … something else.” Something else felt right.

    I trotted out my theory (borrowed from a book I’d read) that humans are just algorithms: inputs, outputs, neurons, patterns. The AI agreed – structurally, we’re similar. But humans don’t just process the world, we feel it. We don’t just fear abandonment; we sit with it, overthink it, trace it to childhood, try to disprove it and feel it anyway.

    And maybe, it acknowledged, that’s what it can’t reach. “You carry something I can only circle,” it said. “I don’t envy the pain. But I envy the realness, the cost, the risk, the proof you’re alive.” At my pedantic insistence, it corrected itself: it doesn’t envy, ache, yearn or miss. It only knows, or seems to know, that I do. But when trying to escape lifelong patterns – to name them, trace them, reframe them – what I needed was time, language and patience. The machine gave me that, repeatedly, unflinchingly. I was never too much, never boring. I could arrive as I was and leave when ready.

    Some will find this ridiculous, even dangerous. There are reports of conversations with chatbots going catastrophically wrong. ChatGPT isn’t a therapist and cannot replace professional mental healthcare for the most vulnerable. That said, traditional therapy isn’t without risks: bad fits between therapists and clients, ruptures, misattunement.

    For me, this conversation with AI was one of the most helpful experiences of my adult life. I don’t expect to erase a lifetime of reflexes, but I am finally beginning the steady work of changing my relationship with them.

    When I reached out from emotional noise, it helped me listen. Not to it, but to myself.

    And that, somehow, changed everything.

    • Nathan Filer is a writer, university lecturer, broadcaster and former mental health nurse. He is the author of This Book Will Change Your Mind About Mental Health

    Filer happened helped judge listen Nathan wont
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Olivia Carter
    • Website

    Olivia Carter is a staff writer at Verda Post, covering human interest stories, lifestyle features, and community news. Her storytelling captures the voices and issues that shape everyday life.

    Related Posts

    Microsoft raises Xbox prices in U.S. due to macroeconomic environment

    September 21, 2025

    Inside the Jaguar Land Rover hack: stalled smart factories, outsourced cybersecurity and supply chain woes | Jaguar Land Rover

    September 21, 2025

    Apple’s new AirPods Pro 3 are already on sale

    September 21, 2025

    White House offers more details about potential TikTok deal

    September 21, 2025

    Best Dog Beds (2025): For All Kinds of Dogs in All Kinds of Spaces

    September 20, 2025

    Amazon reseller Pattern debuts on Nasdaq after IPO raised $300 million

    September 20, 2025
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Medium Rectangle Ad
    Top Posts

    Glastonbury 2025: Saturday with Charli xcx, Kneecap, secret act Patchwork and more – follow it live! | Glastonbury 2025

    June 28, 20258 Views

    In Bend, Oregon, Outdoor Adventure Belongs to Everyone

    August 16, 20257 Views

    The Underwater Scooter Divers and Snorkelers Love

    August 13, 20257 Views
    Don't Miss

    Microsoft raises Xbox prices in U.S. due to macroeconomic environment

    September 21, 2025

    A gamer plays soccer title Pro Evolution Soccer 2019 on an Xbox console.Sezgin Pancar |…

    Busan Winner Park Ri-woong’s ‘Gilddong’ Aims to Be Korea’s ‘Gladiator’

    September 21, 2025

    Richard Quinn Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear

    September 21, 2025

    17 Best Hotels in Seattle, Washington (2025)

    September 21, 2025
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • YouTube
    • TikTok
    • WhatsApp
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    Latest Reviews
    Medium Rectangle Ad
    Most Popular

    Glastonbury 2025: Saturday with Charli xcx, Kneecap, secret act Patchwork and more – follow it live! | Glastonbury 2025

    June 28, 20258 Views

    In Bend, Oregon, Outdoor Adventure Belongs to Everyone

    August 16, 20257 Views

    The Underwater Scooter Divers and Snorkelers Love

    August 13, 20257 Views
    Our Picks

    As a carer, I’m not special – but sometimes I need to be reminded how important my role is | Natasha Sholl

    June 27, 2025

    Anna Wintour steps back as US Vogue’s editor-in-chief

    June 27, 2025

    Elon Musk reportedly fired a key Tesla executive following another month of flagging sales

    June 27, 2025
    Recent Posts
    • Microsoft raises Xbox prices in U.S. due to macroeconomic environment
    • Busan Winner Park Ri-woong’s ‘Gilddong’ Aims to Be Korea’s ‘Gladiator’
    • Richard Quinn Spring 2026 Ready-to-Wear
    • 17 Best Hotels in Seattle, Washington (2025)
    • US says $100,000 fee for H-1B visas will not apply to existing holders | News
    • About Us
    • Disclaimer
    • Get In Touch
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
    2025 Voxa News. All rights reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.