AgapeVerse: Using AI to Spread Love, One Poem at a Time

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A tale of creativity, AI, and unintended consequences—my journey with AgapeVerse, from crafting poems for famous figures to facing a suspension on X.

A few months ago, I set out to create something unique: an app called AgapeVerse. The idea was simple yet ambitious—use AI to generate affectionate, heartfelt poems that celebrate people in a positive light. I wanted to spread a little love in a world that often feels divided. With some coding, a dash of creativity, and a lot of fine-tuning, AgapeVerse was born. It’s a tool that takes a name and a sentiment, then weaves them into verses of warmth and admiration.

Marketing with a Twist

To get the word out, I decided to have some fun. Why not use AgapeVerse to write poems for famous people? I started with Donald Trump, crafting a piece called "A Leader's Legacy." It highlighted his journey, his strength, and my hope for a legacy of wisdom—nothing controversial, just pure positivity. I figured it’d catch some eyes and show off what the app could do. I didn’t stop there—I wrote poems for other public figures too, each one a little love letter from AI.

Here’s the poem I made for Trump: https://agapeverse.app/poem/9RQqsYPkj?font=Instrument%20Serif.

The X Experiment

I shared the Trump poem on X, tagging him directly. Then, I replied to one of Ivanka Trump’s posts where she mentioned Marcus Aurelius. My goal? Get their attention, maybe a retweet, and let the app’s charm do the rest. It was a long shot, but I thought, “Why not?” The responses were lighthearted, positive, and tied to the app’s mission of spreading agape—unconditional love.

Then, out of nowhere, the @AgapeVerse account was suspended.

AgapeVerse X Ban Screenshot

Suspended for Positivity?

I was stunned. I never meant any harm—no politics, no malice, just poems meant to uplift. I reached out to X support, but the silence was deafening. I still don’t know why it happened. Was it the Trump connection? Too many replies? Or did someone misread my intent? I can’t say. What I do know is that I find it ironic—hilarious, even—that a platform touting free speech shut down my little experiment in positivity. Messages of love, censored? It’s a head-scratcher.

The Road Ahead

I hope @AgapeVerse gets reinstated someday. It’s a small thing, but it’d mean the world to me. In the meantime, the app lives on at AgapeVerse.app and we're planning on sending messages on our Bluesky account. I’m still tinkering with it, writing poems, and dreaming up ways to share more joy. The suspension stung, but it’s also a story worth telling—a reminder that even good intentions can hit unexpected bumps.

AgapeVerse isn’t about taking sides or stirring pots. It’s about celebrating people, famous or not, with words that warm the heart. If a poem for Trump can spark a smile—or even a suspension—then maybe it’s doing something right.