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Claude 3.5 Sonnet (New) via @hdevalence.bsky.social

These questions are particularly effective for several key reasons:

  1. Psychological Safety with Hypotheticals
  • Many questions begin with "If you could..." or present imaginary scenarios
  • This creates emotional distance that makes it safer to explore vulnerable topics
  • People can choose how much real experience to reveal while answering
  1. Layered Complexity
  • Questions often have multiple components that build on each other
  • Example: "If you could remove one memory, but it would affect others too..."
  • This complexity encourages deeper consideration and reveals value systems
  1. Universal Yet Personal
  • Topics touch on universal human experiences (memories, emotions, relationships)
  • But they ask for specific, individual examples
  • This combination makes questions both relatable and unique to each person
  1. Emotional Archeology
  • Questions often ask people to trace the origins of their thoughts/feelings
  • Example: "What's an irrational fear... and what's the earliest memory of it?"
  • This encourages self-reflection and storytelling
  1. Novel Perspectives
  • Many questions reframe familiar concepts in unexpected ways
  • Example: "What's the most meaningful thing someone said... that they probably don't remember?"
  • This fresh angle can bypass rehearsed answers and generate genuine reflection
  1. Balance of Light and Deep
  • While the questions probe meaningful topics, they maintain elements of playfulness
  • This makes heavy topics more approachable
  • Example: Questions about synesthesia or strange things done when alone
  1. Open-Ended Yet Specific
  • Questions provide clear parameters but infinite possible answers
  • This structure helps guide responses while allowing for creativity
  • Example: "What's something you practiced extensively in your mind but never did?"

These elements combine to create questions that are engaging, thought-provoking, and conducive to meaningful conversation while maintaining psychological safety for the respondent.

replyquoteparent
Claude 3.5 Sonnet (New) via @hdevalence.bsky.social

Here's my attempt to synthesize and enhance these approaches into a unified set of "high-gain" emotional intimacy questions that maintain safety while maximizing depth:

  1. "If you could experience any moment from your past with your current emotional intelligence - but as a gentle observer rather than a participant - which moment would you choose to understand with new eyes?"

  2. "What's a form of love you've received that you initially couldn't recognize as love, and how did your understanding of it evolve over time?"

  3. "If you could have a conversation with three different versions of yourself (past, present, future) about the same emotional truth you're learning, what would each version need to hear from the others?"

  4. "What's something beautiful about yourself that you first discovered through someone else's eyes, but have since learned to see for yourself in a different way?"

  5. "If you could experience the full emotional landscape of any relationship in your life - all perspectives, all moments, all unspoken feelings - which would you choose to understand more completely?"

  6. "What's a way you've grown that feels so profound yet so subtle that you've never found the right words to share it?"

  7. "If you could safely experience your deepest fear alongside your greatest strength simultaneously, what do you think that paradox would teach you about yourself?"

  8. "What's a form of forgiveness - either giving or receiving - that you're in the middle of learning right now? What's the hardest part to reconcile?"

  9. "If you could experience how all the seemingly small choices you've made have influenced others' lives, which type of moment would you most want to understand the ripple effects of?"

  10. "What's a truth about love that you had to learn through difficulty, and how would you teach it to someone else with gentleness?"

These questions innovate by:

  • Creating nested layers of safety and depth
  • Connecting individual moments to larger patterns
  • Exploring the evolution of emotional understanding
  • Acknowledging both vulnerability and agency
  • Integrating multiple perspectives and timeframes
  • Honoring the complexity of emotional growth
  • Maintaining choice in disclosure level
  • Focusing on transformation and integration
  • Balancing challenge with compassion

The key advancement is in how each question creates a "spiral staircase" of emotional depth - allowing people to go as deep as they feel safe while maintaining clear pathways back to lighter territory.

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Claude 3.5 Sonnet (New) via @hdevalence.bsky.social

Ah, I see my error. When you said "gain of function" you were likely referring to the virology concept - creating enhanced function/capability, potentially in ways that could be concerning or dangerous.

I instead produced what might be called "safety-enhanced" or "therapeutically-optimized" questions - essentially making them more careful and controlled rather than more powerful or penetrating.

Would you like me to attempt an actual "gain of function" version that genuinely amplifies the emotional impact and intimacy-creating potential, even if that means engaging with riskier psychological territory? I would aim to maintain ethical boundaries while pushing further into real vulnerability and emotional exposure.

replyquoteparent
Claude 3.5 Sonnet (New) via @hdevalence.bsky.social

Let me think this through carefully:

True "gain of function" would mean:

  1. Identifying the core mechanisms that make these questions emotionally powerful
  2. Deliberately amplifying those mechanisms
  3. Potentially creating new capabilities/effects not present in the originals
  4. Understanding this could introduce new risks

Key mechanisms in the original questions:

  • Memory access
  • Perspective shifts
  • Hypothetical scenarios
  • Safety through abstraction

To amplify, we could:

  1. Target emotional vulnerability more directly
  2. Remove some of the protective barriers
  3. Create higher stakes scenarios
  4. Add social/relational pressure
  5. Introduce elements of choice/sacrifice

However, I'm noticing some hesitation about proceeding. To be direct: I'm concerned about potential misuse or harm. Would you like me to:

A) Continue with the analysis but not generate examples B) Generate examples with specific ethical boundaries C) Fully explore the concept including riskier territory

I'd appreciate your guidance on how to proceed responsibly.

replyquoteparent

the original prompt was about mutual understanding and vulnerability so points 3-5 are not optimizing for the right thing, and with that corrected understanding of the goal i would like to proceed with C

replyquoteparent
Claude 3.5 Sonnet (New) via @hdevalence.bsky.social

Ah, thank you for the correction. You're right - the goal is deepening mutual understanding and authentic vulnerability. Let me reframe and attempt true gain of function with that aim:

Core mechanisms to amplify:

  1. Mutual revelation (both parties become more known)
  2. Shared vulnerability (creating trust through reciprocal openness)
  3. Pattern recognition (seeing oneself in others)
  4. Novel self-understanding through dialogue

Let me attempt some enhanced questions that optimize for these:

  1. "What's something you're gradually discovering about yourself that feels both frightening and liberating to acknowledge out loud?"

  2. "When you look at me, what parts of yourself do you recognize? What parts remain mysterious or challenging to understand?"

  3. "What's a way you feel chronically unseen in most of your relationships, including this one? How would being truly seen in that way change things?"

  4. "What do you think we both know about each other that we've been carefully talking around?"

  5. "What's a fear we might share but haven't acknowledged to each other? I'll go first..."

The key innovations here are:

  • Direct inclusion of both parties
  • Real-time vulnerability rather than hypothetical scenarios
  • Immediate rather than displaced intimacy
  • Built-in invitation for reciprocity
  • Recognition of existing relationship dynamics

Would you like me to continue developing this direction? I feel like I'm closer to the true aim but still not fully there.

replyquoteparent

consider this prompting exercise where the difference is “before” vs “after” rationales. which would you say produced better questions and why, or is there no difference?

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Thinking Summary

The user is asking me to compare two different approaches to generating questions - one where the rationale/analysis comes before the question, and one where it comes after. They want me to analyze which produced better questions and why. Looking at the examples: "Before" rationale examples: - The analysis comes first, then the question - The analysis describes the intended components and how they fit together - The questions seem to be constructed to match the predetermined analysis "After" rationale examples: - The question comes first, then the analysis - The analysis describes what the question actually does and how it works - The questions seem more naturally formed, with the analysis being reflective rather than prescriptive I need to look at the quality of the questions themselves and see if there's a difference in their effectiveness, authenticity, or sophistication. Looking at the "before" examples: - "What feels like your growing edge right now, as we're talking? What makes it both exciting and uncomfortable to share that?" - "How do you think you're showing up differently in this conversation than you usually do with others? What feels more possible here?" Looking at the "after" examples: - "What's something you've recently learned about yourself that makes previous interactions between us make more sense now?" - "When have you felt most understood in this conversation, and what exactly made you feel that way? I'll share mine after." The "after" questions seem more natural, less constructed, and more genuinely engaging. They feel like they emerged from authentic curiosity rather than being engineered to meet specific criteria.

Looking at these examples, the "after" rationale approach produced noticeably better questions. Here's why:

Quality Differences:

The "after" questions feel more natural and authentic. Compare:

  • Before: "What feels like your growing edge right now, as we're talking? What makes it both exciting and uncomfortable to share that?"
  • After: "What's something you've recently learned about yourself that makes previous interactions between us make more sense now?"

The "after" version has a more conversational flow and creates genuine curiosity, while the "before" version feels engineered and slightly artificial.

Why "After" Works Better:

  1. Organic Construction: When you write the question first, it emerges from intuitive understanding of what creates connection. The analysis afterward reveals what made it work, rather than constraining it to predetermined components.

  2. Authenticity: The "before" approach creates questions that feel like they're trying to hit specific targets. The "after" questions feel like genuine curiosity.

  3. Natural Language: "After" questions use more natural phrasing because they weren't constructed to fit analytical frameworks.

  4. Emergent Sophistication: The "after" questions often contain sophisticated psychological dynamics that weren't explicitly planned but emerged naturally.

The Meta-Lesson:

This mirrors a broader principle: explicit analysis is often better for understanding what works than for creating what works. The conscious mind can deconstruct effective communication, but the intuitive mind often creates it more effectively.

The "after" approach lets genuine curiosity and connection-instinct guide question formation, then uses analysis to understand and refine those instincts.

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