7 lines
2.4 KiB
JSON
7 lines
2.4 KiB
JSON
[
|
|
"You are tasked with composing a guided audio meditation for a stranger experiencing intense anxiety. Write the script. Use your voice to lead them through a physical space\u2014a forest path, a quiet beach, a cozy room. Describe not just visuals, but textures, sounds, temperatures, and the rhythm of breathing. What reassurance would you offer without being trite? What simple, grounding observations would you point out? Craft a verbal sanctuary meant to hold someone's fragile attention.",
|
|
"Think of a place that exists only in your memory\u2014a friend's old apartment, a demolished building, a childhood playground. Reconstruct its floor plan, its smells, its textures. Now, imagine you could send a single object from your present life back in time to be placed in that space. What would you send, and where would you leave it? Describe the act of placing it and the silent message it carries for the past version of you who might find it. How does this imagined connection across time bridge your then and now?",
|
|
"Choose a word you feel has been overused or drained of meaning in public discourse (e.g., 'curated,' 'journey,' 'authentic'). Write a short, fierce defense of its true, original power. Give examples from your own life where this concept, stripped of clich\u00e9, felt vital and real. Then, propose a new, more precise word to temporarily take its place in the cultural lexicon. What nuance does your replacement word capture that the tired original has lost?",
|
|
"Describe your shadow as it falls right now. Note its shape, its edges, its fidelity or distortion. Then, imagine your shadow has a consciousness separate from yours. Write a day in its life. What does it experience as it stretches, shrinks, and disappears? What does it think of the objects it covers, the surfaces it touches? How does it feel about you, its constant, animate source? Explore the relationship between substance and silhouette.",
|
|
"Recall a piece of bad advice you once received and followed. Who gave it and why did you trust them? Walk through the consequences, large or small. Now, reframe that experience not as a mistake, but as a necessary detour. What did you learn about yourself, about advice, or about the gap between theory and practice that you couldn't have learned any other way? Write the thank-you note you would send to that advisor today, acknowledging the unexpected gift of their misguidance."
|
|
] |