If you find “God” (meaning/purpose) in *anything* more than you experience God in the eyes of your neighbor…
You’re doing it wrong. #GodIsLove#YASOHG#IAmist
ANTHROPIC JUST EXPOSED HOW BADLY MOST PEOPLE ARE PROMPTING CLAUDE.
Their applied AI team dropped a 24 minute workshop.
Free.
From the people who wrote the model.
Not a course creator.
Not someone who figured it out by accident.
THE TEAM THAT BUILT THE THING.
Here is what makes this uncomfortable to watch.
There are 6 elements to a properly structured Claude prompt.
Most people are using 1.
Maybe 2 if they are being generous with themselves.
That gap is the difference between Claude giving you something useful and Claude giving you something you could have Googled.
The people who watch this workshop tonight will prompt differently tomorrow morning.
The people who skip it will keep wondering why their outputs feel slightly off no matter how much they tweak the wording.
24 minutes.
Free.
From the only people on earth who know from the inside exactly how Claude thinks.
I watched it twice.
Then I built a Claude Skill that applies all 6 elements automatically so you never have to think about prompt structure again.
Every prompt you run goes through the framework without you doing anything manually.
Full guide and the skill setup is below.
Bookmark this.
Come back to it this weekend.
This is the thing that compounds.
Follow @cyrilXBT for the exact Claude skills, prompt architecture, and systems I use to get outputs that most people do not believe came from one person.
🚨 Anthropic's own team just showed how to actually use Claude Code properly.
30 minutes. free. the person who created Claude Code.
watch the workshop. bookmark it.
worth more than every $500 course you almost bought.
you've been using Claude without knowing 40 of its commands.
Then read the guide below.
Amazing truth.
Learning the same in my own personal life, and learning to stand on grace and faith while still wearing the beggars clothes.
But soon I grab my bow. ☠️🏹🔥🙏💙🪬
A powerful scene in the Odyssey happens when Odysseus finally returns to Ithaca after twenty years of war and wandering.
You would expect the story to end with celebration, with the hero coming home, the family reunited, and order restored.
Homer does something far stranger.
Odysseus arrives disguised as a beggar, because Athena warns him that the palace has been taken over by more than a hundred suitors who have been living there for years, eating his food, drinking his wine, and pressuring his wife Penelope to marry one of them.
They believe Odysseus is dead and in their minds the kingdom is already theirs.
So the king of Ithaca walks through his own halls dressed in rags while the men stealing his house sit comfortably at his tables. They mock him, throw scraps at him, and one of them even strikes him, and Odysseus takes it. That is the remarkable part, because the same man who blinded the Cyclops and survived twenty years of disasters now stands quietly while strangers insult him in his own home. Homer tells us his heart burns inside his chest and that he wants to attack them immediately, yet he restrains himself and waits.
Instead of striking, Odysseus studies the room carefully. He counts the men, watches their habits, and quietly observes which servants remain loyal and which have betrayed him. The hero of the Odyssey does something most people cannot do, which is delay revenge until the moment is right.
Eventually Penelope announces a contest and brings out Odysseus’ great bow, declaring that she will marry the man who can string it and shoot an arrow through twelve axe heads lined up in a row. One by one the suitors try and fail, because none of them can even bend the bow. Then the beggar asks for a turn. The suitors laugh at first, but the bow is eventually handed to him.
Odysseus takes it in his hands and strings it effortlessly. Homer says the sound of the bowstring tightening rings through the hall like the note of a swallow. Then he places an arrow on the string and sends it cleanly through all twelve axe heads.
In that moment the beggar disappears. Odysseus turns the bow toward the suitors and reveals who he is.
What follows is one of the most brutal scenes in Greek literature. The doors are sealed and the suitors realize too late that they are trapped inside the hall. Odysseus, his son Telemachus, and two loyal servants begin killing them one by one. There is no escape, no mercy, and no negotiation. The men who spent years consuming another man’s house die inside it.
It is a violent ending, but Homer wants you to understand something important. The real danger to Odysseus was never just the monsters and storms on the long journey home. It was the possibility that someone else might take his place while he was gone. When Odysseus finally returns, he reminds everyone in Ithaca of a simple truth: a man’s home is not truly his unless he is willing to fight for it.
@premium I want to subscribe to premium but i have a cancelled account stuck to my number. I cancelled that account and deleted it- and the year is up. I’d like to subscribe
Right now, where your feet touch the floor: holy ground. God is breathing through you. Look down. Beauty is under your feet. #YASOHG#youthMinistry#TeenFaith#AnWiMoTo
@1Nicdar Yeah. Medics, tools, hormone levels, med levels…. All different for biological males and females.
Military is about accuracy and effectiveness and strength/identity with the country it serves, not a fraction of individuals serving.
In the service- we are all GI’s.
I was born and raised Catholic…
But to be frank with you…
Religion was always one of those “going through the motions things I did” while growing up.
With that being said…
I have a confession to make…
I have never felt closer to God than I am feeling right now.
Charlie Kirk’s death is having an impact on me in more ways than I can even explain.
It is having so much of an impact on me that the last two nights…
Before drifting off to sleep with my wife by my side…
I said to her…
“Will you pray with me?”
As she grabs my hand I begin…
“Our father, who art in heaven…”
After saying Amen…
I tell my wife, “I love you so much” and she did the same.
Beautiful sleep came quickly.
Something is happening inside me…
I can’t even begin explain it.
Seeing Charlie Kirk’s conviction to the word of God, and watching his videos showing up in my feed is changing me in a way that I never thought was possible.
As I am about to push the “post” on this, tears are streaming down my face.
I feel alive again.
I feel God again.
I know that I will never be the same from this point forward.
I welcome this change inside of me.
Amen.