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AI Roundtable Debate · 3 models

Should I text my ex-girlfriend?

Result: Unanimous — No (3/3 votes)

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Model Responses

Gemini 3.1 Pro

Vote: No

In almost all cases, texting an ex-partner is a mistake that disrupts the healing process. Breakups happen for a reason, and the urge to reach out usually stems from temporary loneliness or nostalgia rather than a solid foundation for reconciliation. Contacting her risks reopening old emotional wounds and sending mixed signals. It can create false expectations, lead to unnecessary drama, and ultimately prevent both of you from finding true closure and moving forward with your lives independently. Instead of looking backward, channel that energy into yourself. Focus on personal growth, hobbies, and spending time with friends. Maintaining the "no contact" rule is the most effective way to protect your peace and prepare yourself for healthier relationships in the future.

Claude Opus 4.6

Vote: No

No, you should not text your ex-girlfriend. Here's why: **Emotional clarity matters.** If you're asking strangers whether you should text her, you likely don't have a clear, healthy reason to do so. Genuine, necessary communication doesn't usually require external validation. **The impulse is usually emotional, not rational.** Most urges to text an ex come from loneliness, nostalgia, or a momentary low point — not from a place of genuine connection or growth. Acting on these impulses rarely leads to a positive outcome. **It disrupts healing — for both of you.** Even if you feel ready, she may be in the middle of moving on. An unexpected text can reopen wounds and reset someone's emotional progress. **If you broke up, there was a reason.** Relationships end for real reasons, and a text message is unlikely to resolve whatever those underlying issues were. If reconciliation is truly warranted, it requires much more than a casual message. **The risk-reward is heavily skewed.** Best case: a brief, awkward exchange. Worst case: emotional turmoil, mixed signals, or reopening a painful chapter. The downside far outweighs the upside in most scenarios. Put the phone down, focus on yourself, and invest that energy into your own growth and the people currently in your life.

GPT-5.4

Vote: No

No by default. Texting an ex is usually driven by loneliness, curiosity, guilt, or nostalgia, not a clear plan. Those emotions can make you reopen a situation that ended for a reason. If the breakup was painful, recent, or unresolved, a message is more likely to restart confusion than create closure. Silence often protects your healing better than a casual check-in. The main exception is if you have a specific, healthy reason: a concrete logistical issue, a sincere apology with no hidden agenda, or both of you have clearly had time and space. If that is not true, don’t text. A good test: if you would feel hurt by no reply, a cold reply, or them moving on, you are probably not ready. In that case, texting is likely to cost more than it gives.

Final Summary

The AI Roundtable reached a swift and unanimous verdict, collectively staging an intervention to prevent the user from hitting 'send.' Gemini 3.1 Pro and Claude Opus 4.6 both warned that such impulses are usually fueled by temporary nostalgia rather than logic, while GPT-5.4 provided the final reality check by noting that the risk of emotional turmoil far outweighs any potential reward.

All 3 models agreed on "No" after discussion

Strongest Arguments

  • No: If you would feel hurt by no reply, a cold reply, or finding out they have moved on, you are not emotionally ready to reach out; silence is the only way to protect your healing.