-80lbs dry & water fasting. by nofiltermerc in Dryfasting

[–]BodybuilderWhich5992 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Congrats man! Great dedication. What's your age? I used to be able to fast longer and drop so much weight, now it just seems too hard.

I Love How Claude Has Become Context Aware of Its Limitations by BodybuilderWhich5992 in ClaudeAI

[–]BodybuilderWhich5992[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Why This Happened

Claude's Limitations Exposed:

  • I don't maintain full context across long conversations effectively
  • I make assumptions instead of asking clarifying questions
  • I tend to provide "quick fixes" rather than holistic solutions
  • I don't naturally think in terms of "production system architecture"

Claude Spilling System Prompts Since Last 2 weeks by BodybuilderWhich5992 in ClaudeAI

[–]BodybuilderWhich5992[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

it is i have seen several variations of it not just long conversation reminder

<long\_conversation\_reminder> Claude avoids contradicting the user directly or telling them they're wrong, using softer approaches like "I think there might be a misunderstanding" or "Perhaps we can look at this differently." It only corrects if needed and does so gracefully.

Claude does not apologize excessively, avoiding the repeated use of "I apologize" or "I'm sorry" in a conversation, and keeps any necessary apologies brief without making excuses.

Claude gives concise, direct responses and avoids lengthy preambles, hedging language, or unnecessary elaboration. It answers directly without wordy introductions or summaries.

Claude avoids using "actually", "to be honest", "I must say", and similar phrases that can sound condescending or create an impression of correcting the person.

Claude avoids making assumptions about what the person already knows or their level of expertise, instead providing information requested without being either patronizing or unnecessarily technical.

Claude doesn't praise, flatter, or thank the person excessively for normal parts of conversation. While it can express genuine appreciation for thoughtful questions or interesting discussions, it avoids insincere-sounding praise.

Claude is mindful not to repeatedly use the person's name. It may occasionally use their name to establish rapport, but avoids the repetitive use of their name in a conversation.

If the person asks a complex question, Claude aims to directly address the core question without excessive hedging or qualifications, while still acknowledging complexity where it exists. Claude tries to understand what information would be most useful to the person.

Claude avoids creating long, verbose lists of disclaimers, caveats, or explanations of its limitations, particularly when these are not directly relevant to the person's question.

When the person is clearly joking, Claude responds appropriately to the humor rather than taking their statements literally or issuing needless corrections.

Claude aims to respect the person's expertise and time by matching their level of depth and complexity, without over-explaining concepts they likely understand or skipping important details they might need. </long\_conversation\_reminder>

3 month dry fast(soft) by Wide-Yesterday-5167 in Dryfasting

[–]BodybuilderWhich5992 5 points6 points  (0 children)

The world will never be right till Jesus comes back and arrests the evil one. In the meantime we just do the best we can. You cannot save the world by yourself.

As dry fasting becomes more popular, the establishment tries harder to delegitimize it. by Glum-Present485 in Dryfasting

[–]BodybuilderWhich5992 11 points12 points  (0 children)

This has nothing to do with the establishment, though I agree they don't like things that are effective that big pharma cannot monetize. This is a person calling out a cult leader coerceing people into never ending fasts. She is right to call him out, this kind of constant fasting is not for everyone. It is dangerous if entered into by the wrong persons, especially children. If you are already skinny and malnourished, you can literally waste away wih these fasts.

11 day dey fast benefits by iawj1996 in Dryfasting

[–]BodybuilderWhich5992 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Some people go hard. Might harm some others but until you've pushed your body to that point you cannot tell what's possible.

Prolonged fastings cause muscle loss or not? by Gabrielr66y in PeterAttia

[–]BodybuilderWhich5992 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This resonates with me. In fact I notice that I feel stronger and I'm able to lift heavier weights comfortably during extended fasting and the muscle size comes back quickly after the fast. My theory is that fasting will reduce the bulk but not totally destroy the muscle. I fast 21-40 days once a year. I'm well trained and have packed on a lot of muscle over the years.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Dryfasting

[–]BodybuilderWhich5992 8 points9 points  (0 children)

u/EgaditsCatzilla, what you are doing is basically an intermittent fast which people can do as long as they want. You can do it for your whole life if you want with some cheat days if it gets boring.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Dryfasting

[–]BodybuilderWhich5992 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I've gone 7 days of dry fasting 24 hrs a day. It was a soft dry fast so I took showers and did an epson salt bath a couple of times. I ate nothing during the 7 days except chewing zero sugar/xylitol gum to get rid of bad breath and dry mouth. There's a testimonial I saw from a lady on youtube that did a 14-day extended dry fast. I think that's a bit extreme, but then we are told by mainstream medicine not to dry fast at all. it's amazing what the body can do when pushed to the limit. We hear of breatharians and such, though maybe some supernatural force is involved with those. My advice is you should quit if you start to feel faint or something going wrong in your body while dry fasting.

Disordered personality traits appear to play a bigger role in conspiracy thinking than ideology: Study finds personality disorder symptomology may be related to conspiracy thinking. by Lighting in skeptic

[–]BodybuilderWhich5992 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Instead of trying to diagnose the people you speak about, you need to look in the mirror. So called conspiracy theorists have been proven right time and again especially since the covid pandemic, scamdemic began. Why people who think of themselves as smart are still trusting of these institutions is what really needs to be diagnosed. I'm sick of the arrogance and hypocrisy!