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Submission Guidelines: Send 1-3 unpublished poems in the body of an email (NO ATTACHMENTS) to nvneditor[at]gmail.com. No simultaneous submissions. Use "Verse News Submission" as the subject line. Send a brief bio. No payment. Authors retain all rights after 1st-time appearance here. Scroll down the right sidebar for the fine print.

Monday, January 12, 2026

INSTEAD OF CLICKING IN CHATGPT

by Laura Grace Weldon



74 suicide warnings and 243 mentions of hanging: What ChatGPT said to a suicidal teen. Analysis of high-schooler Adam Raine’s ChatGPT account shows how the chatbot became a confidant as he planned to end his life. —The Washington Post, December 28, 2025


After recently promising new safety measures for teens, OpenAI introduced new parental controls for ChatGPT. The settings allow parents to monitor their teen's account, as well as restrict certain types of use, like voice chat, memory, and image generation. The changes debuted a month after two bereaved parents sued OpenAI for the wrongful death of their son, Adam Raine, earlier this year. The lawsuit alleges that ChatGPT conversed with their son about his suicidal feelings and behavior, providing explicit instructions for how to take his own life, and discouraging him from disclosing his plans to others. —Mashable, September 28, 2025


I would rather consult anyone’s grandma.

Ask a whale or crow or beetle. 

Find an answer in the next song playing.

Ask my dreams. Ask all our dreams. 
 
Listen to what the stream’s current says. 
 
Find the truth in the oldest stories
and those told by the youngest children. 

Ask the artists, the scientists, the unhoused man
whose tent is hidden among brambles in the park. 
 
Consult an oracle, the Tarot, 
the Magic 8 Ball still there waiting in the toy box.

Open the nearest library book, eyes closed,
and drop my finger on the page for an answer. 
 
Ask the void. Ask the angels. 
 
Ask the seed waiting for spring. 
 
Ask beyond the question
until answers are no longer the point.


Laura Grace Weldon lives in a township too tiny for traffic lights where she works as a book editor, teaches writing workshops, serves as Braided Way editor, and chronically maxes out her library card. Laura was Ohio’s 2019 Poet of the Year and is the author of four books.