Dan’s prompts really are something else—Human 3.0. I’ve also found that combining strong prompts across models (Sabrin Ramonov) and writers can open up depth that a single framework often can’t. Setting those guide rails for and stopping it from hallucinating. Already done in this prompt, temperature, I'd do it at the system level.
This is done well about the “fixing” mode and into something closer to being vs. just clarity, integrity, and orientation rather than deficiency repair. Your parents modeled that, and it was so well articulated in your piece.
That’s a gift not everyone gets early, A lot of people are still trying to build that inner foundation later in life. Most of these great thinkers point to “Don’t fear” repeats though there works yet many still operate by navigating shame or regrets, so seeing it articulated this cleanly is valuable.
At my age, even as a lifelong Bruce Lee fan, I’m reminded that the real constraint is the machinery—more vegetables, fewer carbs, more protein. My future self doesn’t let me forget.
For those navigating this technological shift, this kind of work is worth returning to. It reads like live art, something that keeps refining you as you use it. Prompts like this aren’t one-and-done; they renew themselves as you do.
Ik enjoying this essay Billy. I have run this prompt too. I think it’s interesting you’ve set it out like a journal entry. Like a drop in on a conversation. Almost like a play.
Dan’s prompts really are something else—Human 3.0. I’ve also found that combining strong prompts across models (Sabrin Ramonov) and writers can open up depth that a single framework often can’t. Setting those guide rails for and stopping it from hallucinating. Already done in this prompt, temperature, I'd do it at the system level.
This is done well about the “fixing” mode and into something closer to being vs. just clarity, integrity, and orientation rather than deficiency repair. Your parents modeled that, and it was so well articulated in your piece.
That’s a gift not everyone gets early, A lot of people are still trying to build that inner foundation later in life. Most of these great thinkers point to “Don’t fear” repeats though there works yet many still operate by navigating shame or regrets, so seeing it articulated this cleanly is valuable.
At my age, even as a lifelong Bruce Lee fan, I’m reminded that the real constraint is the machinery—more vegetables, fewer carbs, more protein. My future self doesn’t let me forget.
For those navigating this technological shift, this kind of work is worth returning to. It reads like live art, something that keeps refining you as you use it. Prompts like this aren’t one-and-done; they renew themselves as you do.
Cool Bill. Keep it up.
Ik enjoying this essay Billy. I have run this prompt too. I think it’s interesting you’ve set it out like a journal entry. Like a drop in on a conversation. Almost like a play.
Cool bro. Keep it up.