The Reframe Prompt: How I Use Claude to Break My Own Assumptions
Most prompts ask AI to confirm what you already think. This one does the opposite. I call it the Reframe Prompt, and it's changed how I approach every stuck creative problem.
Real prompts. Real tools. Real experiments.
Everything I learn, I document. Every pattern I find, I share. This is the notebook I wish I'd had when I started.
Most prompts ask AI to confirm what you already think. This one does the opposite. I call it the Reframe Prompt, and it's changed how I approach every stuck creative problem.
Step-by-step: the actual workflow, the actual prompts, the actual output. No fluff. This is the session that made me realize AI isn't a shortcut — it's a multiplier.
It's not the model. It's the context you're giving it. Here's the structural change I made to every prompt that turned vague outputs into something I'd actually use.
Same context, same prompt, three models, very different outputs. Here's what I learned about when to use which — and why the answer changes depending on your goal.
The framing that changed everything. When I started treating Claude like a senior collaborator instead of a search engine, the quality of my outputs shifted immediately.
I don't have a team. I have Claude. Here's how I use it to pressure-test ideas, catch blind spots, and move faster than I could with a traditional brainstorm.
I've tried every prompt library system. Most are useless. Here's the minimal version that actually works — and the prompts I reach for every single week.
There was a specific session — one output — that changed how I thought about this entirely. It wasn't better than I could do alone. It was different. That's the point.
The name, the idea, the alchemy — and why I'm building this in public instead of waiting until it's perfect. A short essay on craft, tools, and what I'm actually doing here.
I work 1:1 with people who want to move faster with AI — without losing their voice or their standards.
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