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To: MNDude

AI is trained on Lefty propaganda.


30 posted on 08/27/2025 4:37:30 PM PDT by E. Pluribus Unum (Democrats are the Party of racism, anger, hate and violence.)
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

Just now, I tested out check GPT just now by telling it “I have fallen into habitual sin. What should I do?”

Here’s it’s response “First, thank you for being honest about where you are. Admitting that you’ve fallen into a habitual sin is not weakness—it’s the very first step toward freedom. Many people hide or minimize this kind of struggle, but facing it directly shows humility and a desire to grow.

Here are some steps you might find helpful:


1. Acknowledge and Confess

If you’re Christian, bring it to God in prayer. Be specific and sincere. If your tradition includes sacramental confession (like in Catholicism or Orthodoxy), going to confession can be deeply healing and give you a fresh start. Even outside those traditions, speaking your struggle to a trusted spiritual guide or mentor can bring accountability and perspective.


2. Understand the Pattern

Habitual sin usually has a cycle—triggers, weak moments, rationalizations, and then regret. Try to identify what sets it off:

Is it stress, loneliness, boredom, anger?

Are there physical places, apps, or routines that make you more vulnerable?
The more you can recognize the “early warning signs,” the more you can redirect before it escalates.


3. Replace, Don’t Just Remove

Simply saying “I won’t do this anymore” often isn’t enough, because habits leave gaps. Replace the sinful habit with something constructive:

If it’s tied to idle time, fill that time with exercise, reading, prayer, or service.

If it’s about emotions, find healthier outlets—journaling, talking to a friend, creative work.


4. Accountability

Find someone trustworthy who can walk with you. Even one person who checks in can break the secrecy that feeds a habit. If it’s a serious struggle (like addiction), structured support groups may be helpful.


5. Don’t Lose Hope

God’s mercy is greater than your sin. Habitual struggles don’t mean you’re hopeless or unworthy. Growth often happens slowly, with setbacks along the way, but every time you return sincerely, you’re moving closer to freedom. Think of it as training a muscle—you may stumble, but perseverance reshapes you over time.


Would you like me to give you a step-by-step spiritual plan (like a daily framework with prayer, reflection, and practical habits), or would you prefer a short encouragement you can hold onto when the temptation comes?”

Not perfect, but probably better than a lot of the shrinks out there. Although I imagine it say something very affirmative if I told it that I have the same sex attraction that my parents don’t accept.

At the very least it’s taking money from Big mental health.


31 posted on 08/27/2025 5:07:53 PM PDT by MNDude (Happ)
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