Someone on Reddit posted a prompt with a warning.

"Trust me when I say you need to try this. It personally gave me an existential crisis."

That's either the most dramatic prompt review ever written or the most honest one. Turns out, it's the second one.

I ran it on my biggest stuck situation this week. What came back wasn't a plan. It was clarity I wasn't ready for.

The post got buried under the usual flood of AI productivity tips. But people who ran the prompt kept coming back to the comments to say the same thing: it didn't give them advice. It named what they already knew but were avoiding.

One person sat with the output for two days before responding. Another said it named a fear they'd been carrying for eight months without knowing it had a name.

That's not productivity content. That's something else.

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How it works

This is a Leadership Mental Framework. Four phases. It diagnoses before it advises.

Phase 1: Read before responding

Before it says a single word, it reads the emotional weather of your situation. Stagnation. Chaos. Grief. Conflict. It names whats happening and, more importantly, what you're avoiding. That last part is where people get uncomfortable.

Most prompts skip this entirely. They take your input at face value and solve the surface problem. This one slows down and asks what's actually going on underneath.

If you say you're stuck on a business decision, it might reflect back that you made the decision weeks ago. You're just stuck on the courage to act on it. That distinction changes everything about what comes next.

Phase 2: Calibrate

It checks your current state (depleted, scattered, numb, agitated) and adjusts accordingly.

If you come in scattered, it doesn't hand you a five-step framework. It narrows the focus. If you come in numb, it doesn't try to motivate you with energy you don't have. It works with stillness instead of against it.

This phase is subtle. But it's why the same prompt gives two people completely different responses to completely different situations.

Phase 3: Respond with tension awareness

Seven directives run here. The ones that hit hardest:

  • It asks what you're actually willing to commit to (not thinking about, committing to)

  • It holds gut vs logic in tension out loud: "My intuition says X, the logic suggests Y"

  • It uses sarcasm as a tension release, not a shield

There's a massive gap between "I've been thinking about launching this" and "I am committing to launching this by April." The prompt doesn't let you stay in the thinking zone. It asks you to plant a flag.

The gut vs logic piece does something most frameworks don't. Instead of asking you to pick one, it holds both in tension and names the conflict. Seeing it written out plainly makes it harder to keep pretending the conflict doesn't exist.

Phase 4: Anchor

Names the one thing that matters most right now. Closes with forward momentum, not just reflection.

Not a summary. One thing.

The anchor phase is built around the idea that most stuck situations have a single load-bearing point. Surface it and the rest gets easier. Ignore it and you can optimize everything around it and still go nowhere.

The response won't always get your anchor right. But it will force you to either agree or explain why it's wrong, and both outcomes move you forward.

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What your results tell you

If the response feels generic, you gave it a generic situation. Go back and be specific. Name the actual fear, not the polished version of it.

If it makes you uncomfortable? Honestly, that's the point. It's designed to surface what you already know but won't say out loud.

If you find yourself arguing with the output, sit with that before you dismiss it. Sometimes the resistance means the prompt got close to something real. The goal isn't to agree with everything. The goal is to stop avoiding the conversation entirely.

Before you run it

  • Write unfiltered, first person. "I've been avoiding this for three weeks because I'm scared it'll flop" beats "I have a business challenge."

  • Run it on a pattern, not a one-off event. Recurring situations reveal more.

  • Don't clean up your writing before pasting. Messy input gets honest output.

  • If the first response feels too surface-level, paste it back with: "Go deeper on the avoidance piece."

  • Use it at end of a week, not the beginning. You need data from lived experience, not hypotheticals.

The prompt is right below. Paste your real situation. See what comes back.

Sometimes you don't need a strategy. You need something to hold up a mirror and ask the question you keep dodging.

The prompt won't fix your situation. But it might finally make you honest about what the situation actually is. That's usually where the fix begins.

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