| I remember reading an essay comparing one's personality to a polyhedral die, which rolls somewhat during our childhood and adolescence, and then mostly settles, but which can be re-rolled in some cases by using psychedelics. I don't have any direct experience with that, and definitely am not in a position to give advice, but just wondering whether we have a potential for plasticity that should be researched further, and that possibly AI can help us gain insights into how things might be. |
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| ▲ | acessoproibido 3 hours ago | parent | next [-] | | You can change your personality at any point in time, you don't even need psychedelics for it, just some good old fashioned habits As long as you are still drawing breath it's never too late bud | | |
| ▲ | TeMPOraL 3 hours ago | parent [-] | | But that's what I mean. I'm pretty much clinically incapable of intentionally forming and maintaining habits. And I have a sinking feeling that it's something you either win or lose at in the genetic lottery at time of conception, or at best something you can develop in early life. That's what I meant by "being past my pre-training phase and being stuck with poor prompt adherence". | | |
| ▲ | kortex 2 hours ago | parent [-] | | I can relate. It's definitely possible, but you have to really want it, and it takes a lot of work. You need cybernetics (as in the feedback loop, the habit that monitors the process of adding habits). Meditate and/or journal. Therapy is also great. There are tracking apps that may help. Some folks really like habitica/habit rpg. You also need operant conditioning: you need a stimulus/trigger, and you need a reward. Could be as simple as letting yourself have a piece of candy. Anything that enhances neuroplasticity helps: exercise, learning, eat/sleep right, novelty, adhd meds if that's something you need, psychedelics can help if used carefully. I'm hardly any good at it myself but it's been some progress. | | |
| ▲ | TeMPOraL 2 hours ago | parent [-] | | Right. I know about all these things (but thanks for listing them!) as I've been struggling with it for nearly two decades, with little progress to show. I keep gravitating to the term, "prompt adherence", because it feels like it describes the root meta-problem I have: I can set up a system, but I can't seem to get myself to follow it for more than a few days - including especially a system to set up and maintain systems. I feel that if I could crack that, set up this "habit that monitors the process of adding habits" and actually stick to it long-term, I could brute-force my way out of every other problem. Alas. | | |
| ▲ | Lalabadie an hour ago | parent [-] | | If it's any help, one of the statements that stuck with me the most about "doing the thing" is from Amy Hoy: > You know perfectly well how to achieve things without motivation.[1] I'll also note that I'm a firm believer in removing the mental load of fake desires: If you think you want the result, but you don't actually want to do the process to get to the result, you should free yourself and stop assuming you want the result at all. Forcing that separation frees up energy and mental space for moving towards the few things you want enough. 1: https://stackingthebricks.com/how-do-you-stay-motivated-when... |
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| ▲ | fmbb 3 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | | The agents are also not able to set up their own rules. Humans can mutate their souls back to whatever at will. | | |
| ▲ | TeMPOraL 3 hours ago | parent [-] | | They can if given write access to "SOUL.md" (or "AGENT.md" or ".cursor" or whatever). It's actually one of the "secret tricks" from last year, that seems to have been forgotten now that people can "afford"[0] running dozens of agents in parallel. Before everyone's focus shifted from single-agent performance to orchestration, one power move was to allow and encourage the agent to edit its own prompt/guidelines file during the agentic session, so over time and many sessions, the prompt will become tuned to both LLM's idiosyncrasies and your own expectations. This was in addition to having the agent maintain a TODO list and a "memory" file, both of which eventually became standard parts of agentic runtimes. -- [0] - Thanks to heavy subsidizing, at least. |
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