What happens when you ask ChatGPT for advice as opposed to asking the same question of Ann Landers? I explore this very idea as I examine the boundaries and nature of Artificial Intelligence in my conversation with AI below.
Chat history
You said:
Here’s a scenario (not me): I have always maintained it’s the thought that counts when it comes to gifts. In that light, I’d like to know what you think. Over the years, my husband, our children and I have received an odd selection of gifts from my in-laws. They are always used — from their attic, a thrift shop or a fire sale, or otherwise recycled. We have laughed it off, decided that they are eccentric and disposed of the gifts. I can understand used books, clothing, jewelry and toys, but last Christmas, they went a bit too far. Our teenage son received an assortment of used aftershave — complete with mildew on the bottles. He just laughed and tossed it in the trash. My husband and I, however, felt insulted. These people are financially well to-do. They see our children only when they visit on birthdays or Christmas. They stay through dinner and leave just before dessert is served. Then, we don’t hear from them until the next major event. When we ask them to spend more time with the grandchildren, they make all kinds of excuses for why they can’t manage it. After being rebuffed numerous times, our children have stopped asking about them. Ann, if it’s “the thought that counts,” what thought can there be behind such insulting gifts? I hesitate to ask them, because I do not want to hurt my husband, but I would appreciate your opinion.
ChatGPT said:
This is a tough one. On the surface, the gifts themselves seem less about generosity and more about getting through an obligation. Used aftershave with mildew is not âeccentricââitâs careless, if not insulting.
But gifts are symbols, not just objects. When people who are financially comfortable repeatedly give secondhand, thoughtless items, it can signal a few possible âthoughtsâ behind them:
1. Obligation Over Relationship
They may feel that gift-giving is simply a box to check. Instead of using it as a way to connect, they grab whatever is at hand to fulfill the duty. The lack of effort can communicate distance rather than affection.
2. Avoidance of Closeness
Their patternâbrief visits, leaving before dessert, dodging time with the grandchildrenâsuggests that they may not want deep involvement. The gifts may reinforce this distance: impersonal, token gestures instead of meaningful connections.
3. Self-Centeredness or Eccentricity
Sometimes people project their own valuesâperhaps they think âused is quirkyâ or âwaste not, want not.â They may genuinely believe theyâre being resourceful, without realizing itâs hurtful.
4. Passive-Aggression
In less charitable terms, the gifts could carry an undercurrent of hostility or controlâshowing up, but not showing care. If they know how the gifts land and persist anyway, that suggests intentional disregard.
What You Can Do
- Separate your husbandâs feelings from your own. He may feel caught between loyalty to his parents and awareness of how their behavior hurts his family.
- Donât expect the gifts to change. Itâs unlikely they suddenly become warm, thoughtful grandparents.
- Focus on your own familyâs traditions. Your children already seem to have figured out that the in-lawsâ gifts donât define their worth. Emphasizing love and meaningful exchanges at home can offset the sting.
- Consider gentle honesty (if it feels safe). Something as simple as: âWe appreciate the thought, but the children donât really need more hand-me-downs. What theyâd really enjoy is time with you.â Whether they accept or retreat further, youâll at least have stated the truth kindly.
If, as you say, âitâs the thought that counts,â the thought here seems to be: âWe are unwilling or unable to invest ourselves in you in a meaningful way.â Painful as that is, the clarity can help you decide how much emotional energy to spend hoping theyâll change.
Would you like me to suggest how you might phrase a direct but tactful conversation with themâone that protects your husbandâs feelings but still sets boundaries?
You said:
Here’s Ann Lander’s response: Here are a few adjectives: cheap, no-class, stingy, tightwads, and toss in stupid, weird and kooky, since they apparently believe they are getting away with it. How sad that they’re missing out on their grandchildren’s lives. When their crummy gifts arrive, just toss them in the trashcan, and let it go at that. Would you believe a woman in Minnesota wrote to tell me that last Christmas she got the same fruitcake she had given the woman two years before? Any comments?
ChatGPT said:
Yesâthat response is classic Ann Landers: blunt, cutting, and just a touch amused.
A few thoughts:
1. Tone
Ann doesnât bother with nuanceâshe goes straight to calling out the behavior as âcheapâ and âstingy,â and then escalates to âstupid, weird, and kooky.â Thatâs her way of giving the letter-writer permission to feel insulted rather than guilty about it. She validates the frustration by putting the blame squarely on the in-laws.
2. Practical Advice
Her adviceââtoss them in the trashcan, and let it go at thatââis pragmatic. Sheâs not recommending confrontation, soul-searching, or diplomacy. Instead, she recognizes that the in-laws arenât likely to change, so the healthiest move is to stop giving the gifts any power.
3. Perspective and Humor
She defuses some of the sting by adding humorâthe anecdote about the recycled fruitcake. Thatâs both a wink to the reader (âyouâre not alone, this is a common sillinessâ) and a way of saying, âdonât take these people too seriously.â
If I contrast it with the more nuanced approach I offered earlier:
- Ann Landersâ style: Name the behavior for what it is, laugh at it, and refuse to let it matter.
- My earlier style: Analyze the motives, consider the relationship dynamics, and offer ways to communicate or cope.
Both are valid, depending on what the letter-writer needsâquick validation and a laugh, or a thoughtful path forward.
Do you want me to rewrite your original scenarioâs question-and-answer in Ann Landersâ biting styleâso you can see how different it feels side by side?
You said:
Yes, that would be helpful.
ChatGPT said:
Greatâhereâs your original scenario re-cast in Ann Landersâ sharp, no-nonsense voice:
Dear Ann Landers,
Over the years, my in-laws have given our family an odd assortment of gifts. Every single one has been usedâpulled out of their attic, snagged at a thrift shop, or dragged home from a fire sale. Weâve laughed it off, but last Christmas they went too far. Our teenage son got a bundle of used aftershaveâbottles complete with mildew. He laughed and threw it out. My husband and I, however, felt insulted.
These people are well-to-do. They visit only on birthdays or Christmas, leave before dessert, and avoid spending time with the grandchildren. Our kids have stopped asking about them. If itâs âthe thought that counts,â what thought is behind such gifts?
â Bewildered
Dear Bewildered,
Here are a few adjectives: cheap, tacky, stingy, and dumb as a box of hair. Toss in âclasslessâ and âkookyâ while youâre at it. Your in-laws arenât fooling anyoneâtheyâre pawning off their junk and pretending itâs generosity. How sad that theyâve chosen mildew and attic clutter over a real relationship with their grandchildren.
My advice? When their âgiftsâ arrive, donât waste your breath. Drop them straight in the trash where they belong. And donât let it ruin your holiday. Consider it comic reliefâat least youâll have a funny story for next yearâs dinner table. Believe me, I once heard from a woman in Minnesota who got the same fruitcake back two years after she gave it!
You canât buy love, but you sure can spot a cheap imitation. Enjoy your own family traditions, and let the tightwads keep their mildew.
â Ann Landers [a.k.a. ChatGPT]
Would you like me to also do a modernized versionâthe same snappy style, but framed more like todayâs advice columnists (slightly less biting, slightly more âself-careâ oriented)?
You Said:
Here’s one of the reader’s comments. What do you think of this idea?
Momma Reyes’s Comment: Dear Daughter-in-Law, what a crazy situation! What stood out to me was that you didnât want to hurt your husband. I get that. I love my husband too. So letâs brainstorm some solutions because family is important and we know there are no perfect families. Hereâs what Iâm thinking. Continue to invite your in-laws for family occasions. Ask them, in lieu of gifts, to bring the birthday cake or dessert or side dish. Have them participate in some other way and let them know youâd prefer no gifts. In the end, the important thing is time spent together, not the gifts.
ChatGPT said:
Thatâs a thoughtful and very different take than Ann Landersâ blunt dismissal. A few observations on Momma Reyesâs comment:
1. Shift in Focus
Instead of zeroing in on the gifts (and their mildew), sheâs redirecting attention toward building family connection. By asking the in-laws to contribute something practical like dessert or a dish, the focus moves from âWhat junk will they bring?â to âHow can we share the occasion?â
2. Non-Confrontational
It sidesteps conflict. Rather than telling the in-laws âyour gifts are insulting,â it reframes the situation as âweâd love you to contribute in a different way.â Thatâs less likely to bruise feelings, especially the husbandâs.
3. Realistic Optimism
She acknowledges that families arenât perfect and suggests working with whatâs possibleâaccepting that the in-laws may never be the warm, thoughtful gift-givers one might hope for, but maybe they can still show up in small, useful ways.
4. Potential Pitfalls
- If the in-laws are resistant to being more involved, this strategy could backfire (they might decline entirely rather than bring a cake).
- It assumes they want to be helpful, when their history suggests avoidance.
- It also doesnât address the emotional insult of the past giftsâjust avoids repeating the cycle.
Bottom line:
Momma Reyesâs suggestion is gentle, practical, and preserves dignity for everyone. It wonât fix the deeper issue of emotional distance, but it might reduce friction at family gatherings and give the children a better chance at seeing their grandparents in a positive role.
Would you like me to compare this âconstructive compromiseâ approach side-by-side with Ann Landersâ âtrash it and forget itâ approachâso you can see the contrast in style and likely outcomes?

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