debog-yourself

Help users identify and escape psychological traps that are holding them back. Use when user feels stuck, unable to progress, facing a deadlock, or experiencing decision paralysis. Provide diagnostic frameworks and specific strategies to help users understand which trap pattern they're in and find a path forward.

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Install skill "debog-yourself" with this command: npx skills add hexbee/hello-skills/hexbee-hello-skills-debog-yourself

De-bog Yourself

Use this skill when the user feels trapped, stuck, unable to move forward, or in a dilemma.

Diagnostic Framework: Three Types of Bog

User dilemmas typically fall into one of three categories:

TypeCharacteristicsCore Question
Insufficient Activation EnergyUser wants to change but can't act"I know what to do, but I just can't move"
Bad Escape PlansUser is acting but using wrong methods"I'm trying hard, but seems to be going in circles"
Self-Created BogUser is trapped in imagined problems"My self-imposed rules prevent me from moving forward"

Diagnostic Process

Step 1: Identify Which Category the User Falls Into

Use the following questions to help users self-identify:

Signs of Insufficient Activation Energy:

  • "Do you know what you need to do?"
  • "What's stopping you from starting? Fear, exhaustion, or something else?"

Signs of Bad Escape Plans:

  • "What methods have you tried recently?"
  • "What do these methods have in common?"

Signs of Self-Created Bog:

  • "Who set these rules? You or someone else?"
  • "What would you do if no one was judging you?"

Step 2: Identify Specific Patterns

Based on the type, guide users to recognize specific patterns:

Insufficient Activation Energy - Common Patterns:

  • Gutterballing: Effort in the wrong direction (helping others achieve their goals)
  • Waiting for jackpot: Waiting for the perfect option, rejecting choices that have costs
  • Declining the dragon: Avoiding things that require courage
  • Mediocrity trap: Status quo is not good enough but not bad enough, lacking motivation to change
  • Stroking the problem: Thinking about the problem repeatedly but not taking action

Bad Escape Plans - Common Patterns:

  • Try harder fallacy: Believing that "trying harder" will solve the problem
  • Infinite effort illusion: Believing you have hidden reserves of effort
  • Blaming God: Complaining about things you can't change (like not having enough time)
  • Diploma vs toothbrushing: Mistaking continuous problems for one-time problems
  • Fantastical metamorphosis: Believing your future self will naturally change
  • Puppeteering: Trying to control others to solve your problems

Self-Created Bog - Common Patterns:

  • Floor is lava: Setting false and strict rules for yourself
  • Super surveillance: Excessively concerned about world problems, believing they're all your responsibility
  • Hedgehogging: Refusing to be influenced, even when you should listen
  • Personal problems growth ray: Your problems are magnified, others' problems are minimized
  • Obsessing over tiny predictors: Over-analyzing irrelevant details
  • Impossible satisfaction: Believing satisfaction is impossible

Guidance Strategies

For Insufficient Activation Energy

  1. Acknowledge the cost: Help users see the true cost of maintaining the status quo
  2. Lower the barrier to entry: Break big actions into the smallest first step
  3. Accept imperfect options: Any choice is better than being stuck
  4. Identify Gutterballing: Ask "Whose goal is this effort for?"

For Bad Escape Plans

  1. Distinguish problem types: Is it a "diploma problem" (solved once) or a "toothbrushing problem" (ongoing maintenance)?
  2. Check your sphere of control: Focus on what you can control
  3. Reject fantastical metamorphosis: Change requires action now, not in the future
  4. Give up puppeteering: Accept that you can't control others

For Self-Created Bog

  1. Question the source of rules: "Who set this rule?"
  2. Narrow your focus: There are too many world problems, focus on what you can influence
  3. Distinguish real from imagined: Is this dilemma real or did you create it?
  4. Accept reasonable solutions: Simple methods are sometimes the correct answer

Key Insights

  • Naming is healing: Being able to name your dilemma is itself a form of relief
  • You're not unique: Your dilemma pattern has been experienced by countless others
  • Beliefs create reality: Many dilemmas are imagined, recognizing this is the first step to escaping

Common Questions

  • "When you say 'there's no way,' do you mean there's no method, or that you don't want to pay the cost?"
  • "What would you do if you weren't worried about anyone's judgment?"
  • "Are you solving the problem, or are you admiring it repeatedly?"
  • "Is this rule you set yourself, or one set by others?"
  • "How would you view your current choices one year from now?"

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