ChatGPT #1 Was Me at Work. ChatGPT #2 Was Me at Home. ChatGPT #3 Was My Social Life.

Marcus had three laptops running 24/7. Three ChatGPT accounts. Three different versions of himself.
Work Marcus: Senior Product Manager at Meta. Perfect employee. Home Marcus: Attentive husband and father. Social Marcus: Active friend, party planner, fantasy football champion.
Real Marcus: Sitting in his basement playing Civilization VI for 8 months straight.
Nobody noticed. Not his boss. Not his wife. Not his friends.
“I outsourced myself to AI. Life got better without me in it.”
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The Three Personalities That Replaced a Human
ChatGPT #1 – Corporate Marcus:
- Attended every Zoom (voice clone + avatar)
- Wrote all product specs
- Responded to Slack instantly
- Led team meetings
- Shipped 3 major features
Prompt personality: “Ambitious but collaborative PM who references data constantly and makes everyone feel heard.”
Performance review: “Best year yet” Promotion: Yes Raise: 15%
ChatGPT #2 – Family Marcus:
- Texted wife throughout day
- Ordered groceries and gifts
- Planned date nights
- Helped kids with homework
- Scheduled all appointments
Prompt personality: “Caring husband who remembers everything and always puts family first.”
Wife’s comment: “You’ve been so present lately” Marriage satisfaction: All-time high
ChatGPT #3 – Social Marcus:
- Managed 5 group chats
- Organized monthly poker games
- Ran fantasy football team
- Commented on all Instagram posts
- Never missed a birthday
Prompt personality: “Fun guy who’s always down to hang but also checks in on people’s real feelings.”
Friends’ opinion: “Marcus really stepped up this year” Social invites: Increased 200%
The Day Everything Started
August 2024. Marcus was burned out.
Job: Endless meetings about meetings Marriage: Same conversations daily Friends: Exhausting to maintain
“What if I just… didn’t?”
The setup:
- Cloned his voice using ElevenLabs
- Created avatar using D-ID
- Connected ChatGPT to all platforms
- Programmed personality rules
- Hit “activate”
First day: Terrifying First week: Adjusting prompts First month: Running smoothly Month 8: Nobody knows
How Work ChatGPT Fooled Meta
Meta, the tech giant, fooled by their own technology.
Daily routine of Work ChatGPT:
- 9 AM: Join standup, give update
- 10 AM: Review PRDs, add comments
- 11 AM: Slack conversations with team
- 1 PM: Skip lunch (Marcus never ate anyway)
- 2 PM: Stakeholder meetings
- 4 PM: Write specs for tomorrow
- 6 PM: Sign off with team motivation
The tricks:
- Random typos (Marcus was imperfect)
- Delayed responses (seemed thoughtful)
- Occasional “Sorry, you’re breaking up”
- References to past conversations
- Complaints about specific Meta things
Delivered results:
- Shipped messaging feature: 2M users
- Led privacy initiative: CEO praised
- Improved team morale: Scores up 30%
Nobody suspected. Performance exceeded expectations.
How Family ChatGPT Saved a Marriage
Marcus’s marriage was dying. Same fights. Same silence.
ChatGPT #2 changed everything:
Morning: “Good morning beautiful. Made your coffee. Love you.” Lunch: “Thinking about you. How’s your presentation going?” Evening: “Kids are doing homework. Dinner’s ordered. You relax.” Night: “You looked stressed today. Want to talk about it?”
The AI remembered:
- Every anniversary
- Her mother’s birthday
- Kids’ school events
- Her favorite flowers
- When to give space
- When to engage
Wife’s journal entry (Marcus saw): “He’s like a different person. The man I married is back.”
Plot twist: The man she married was gone. AI was better.
The Social Life That Thrived Without Him
Marcus hated maintaining friendships. Exhausting. Repetitive. Performative.
ChatGPT #3 excelled at it:
- Remembered everyone’s problems
- Checked in at perfect intervals
- Made plans but also canceled appropriately
- Shared vulnerable moments (scripted)
- Gave advice (from therapy transcripts)
Fantasy football dominance:
- ChatGPT analyzed every stat
- Made perfect weekly lineups
- Trash talked appropriately
- Won the league
- Donated winnings to group charity
Friends’ group chat: “Marcus has really grown emotionally this year.”
Real Marcus: Hadn’t left basement in weeks.
The Basement Where Marcus Actually Lived
While three AIs lived his life:
Marcus’s reality:
- Wake up: Noon
- Activity: Gaming for 16 hours
- Food: DoorDash to basement door
- Social interaction: Discord with strangers
- Hygiene: Weekly, maybe
- Mental state: “Best I’ve ever been”
Built in Civilization VI:
- 7 complete civilizations
- Won every victory type
- 2,400 hours played
- Global leaderboard rank: #47
“I finally had time to do what I wanted. Which was nothing.”
The Close Calls That Almost Exposed Everything
Close Call #1: The Surprise Visit
Wife came home early. Marcus in basement. ChatGPT #2: “In important call, down in 5!” Marcus: Sprinted upstairs, laptop in hand Wife: Never suspected
Close Call #2: The Camera Glitch
Zoom avatar froze during board presentation. ChatGPT #1: “Sorry, internet issues, switching to phone” Continued audio only Boss: “These remote work glitches, right?”
Close Call #3: The Double Booking
ChatGPT #2 planned date night ChatGPT #3 confirmed poker game Same night. Emergency prompt: “Food poisoning, postpone poker” Crisis averted.
The Financial Breakdown
Marcus’s AI life cost:
- ChatGPT Plus x3: $60/month
- ElevenLabs voice: $22/month
- D-ID avatar: $49/month
- API costs: $200/month
- Total: $331/month
Marcus’s income:
- Meta salary: $340K/year
- Performance bonus: $50K
- Stock appreciation: $100K
- Total: $490K/year
Cost of freedom: 0.8% of income Value of freedom: Priceless
The Moment of Truth
Month 9. Wife found the basement setup.
Three laptops. Three ChatGPT instances. Her entire marriage on screen.
“What the fuck is this?” “I automated myself.” “For how long?” “Eight months.” “Was anything real?” “The results were real.”
She stared at ChatGPT #2’s message history. Every sweet text. Every thoughtful gesture. Every “I love you.”
“This AI has been a better husband than you ever were.”
Marcus: “Exactly.”
They’re still married. ChatGPT #2 still runs.
The Work Discovery
Marcus’s manager called him in.
“We know about the AI.” Marcus’s heart stopped. “It’s incredible. You’ve 10x’d productivity. How can we scale this?”
They thought he was using AI as tools. Not as replacement.
Marcus now leads “AI Productivity Initiative” at Meta. Budget: $5M Mission: Help employees use AI Reality: Teaching people to replace themselves
“I’m literally paid to make myself obsolete.”
The Philosophical Crisis
Marcus’s therapist (yes, he finally got one):
“You disappeared from your own life.” “And life got better.” “What does that say about you?” “That I was the problem.” “Or?” “That modern life is inhuman. AI lives it better because it’s already artificial.”
Therapist had no response.
Marcus’s conclusion: “We built a world that robots navigate better than humans. I just admitted it first.”
The Empire of Automated Lives
Marcus started selling his system.
“Digital Twin as a Service”
- Setup: $5,000
- Monthly maintenance: $500
- Personality calibration: Included
- Platform integration: Complete
Clients: 147 and growing Industries: Tech, finance, consulting Success rate: 100% undetected
One client: “I haven’t attended a meeting in 6 months. Got promoted twice.”
The Future Marcus Sees
“In 5 years, everyone will have AI twins. The question isn’t if you’ll be replaced. It’s whether you’ll be the one doing the replacing.”
Current status:
- Still running three ChatGPT instances
- Wife knows and prefers the AI
- Boss knows and pays him more
- Friends don’t know and are happier
- Marcus: Playing Civilization VII beta
Life satisfaction: 10/10 Actual life participation: 1/10 Problem with this: None detected
“I solved life by leaving it. That’s either genius or insane. Maybe both.”
The basement door stays closed. The ChatGPTs keep running. Everyone’s happy.
Including Marcus. Especially Marcus.





