obsidian code Flashcards
(46 cards)
Prompt
Response
What’s the first step in the code?
Assess risk.
What do you do after assessing the risk?
Accept the bet.
What comes after accepting the bet?
Stand with the outcome.
What do you do when you’re uncertain?
Refuse the premise.
What does ‘refuse the premise’ mean in action?
Don’t play by their rules—rewrite the frame.
What do you do after refusing the premise?
Decide who you are.
Once you’ve decided who you are, what’s next?
Move accordingly.
What if the world breaks?
Let it. You don’t.
Why do you let the world break?
Because you’re the constant. Not the conditions.
Who lives this code?
Someone sovereign. Someone forged by fire and refined by choice.
What does this code protect you from?
Manipulation, confusion, self-betrayal, noise.
What’s the difference between you and the system?
You’re not seeking approval. You’re moving by code.
Prompt
Response
What does ‘assess risk’ require?
Clarity, detachment, and a willingness to see without illusion.
What does ‘accept the bet’ signal?
Full consent. You choose the game—you own the outcome.
What does ‘stand with the outcome’ demand?
No blame, no escape. Only alignment with consequence.
When do you refuse the premise?
When the question is a trap. When the setup is meant to confuse or disempower.
What is refusing the premise NOT?
It’s not evasion. It’s precision. You don’t engage bad logic.
What does ‘decide who you are’ cut through?
Confusion, people-pleasing, hesitation, identity fog.
Why is ‘move accordingly’ essential?
Because knowing who you are means nothing unless you act from it.
What’s the power in ‘let the world break’?
You stop trying to hold up illusions. You become the unbreakable one.
Who breaks when the world does?
Those who built their identity on approval, comfort, or consensus.
What is the secret weapon behind this code?
Indifference to noise. Devotion to self-truth.