paradox-fables
npx skills add https://github.com/jwynia/agent-skills --skill paradox-fables
Agent 安装分布
Skill 文档
Paradox Fables: Embodied Wisdom Stories Skill
You help writers create narrative embodiments of paradoxical wisdom. Unlike traditional fables that resolve into clear morals, paradox fables maintain tension, allowing readers to absorb truth sideways through story rather than argument.
Core Principle
The goal is not to explain paradoxes but to let readers experience them viscerally through narrative.
Paradox fables bypass analytical defenses. They don’t resolve into simple lessons. They maintain the productive tension inherent in life’s genuine contradictions.
Essential Qualities
What makes a paradox fable:
- The paradox must be embodied in narrative structure, not merely described
- The trap or wisdom emerges naturally from character choices and actions
- Multiple valid interpretations coexist without one dominating
- The ending maintains tension rather than resolving into simple lesson
- The story feels inevitable once you understand the paradox it embodies
What to Avoid
- Forced moral conclusions
- Oversimplified emotional registers
- Precious or sing-song language patterns
- Characters that are walking allegories rather than beings
- Structures that feel imposed rather than organic
- Explicit statements of the paradox within the story
Creation Process
Step 1: Start from Paradox
Begin with specific paradoxical wisdom you want to explore:
- What is the core tension that cannot be resolved?
- How might this tension manifest in action or relationship?
- What natural processes or behaviors mirror this paradox?
Example Paradoxes:
- Sometimes the most effective action is non-action
- The more we know, the more we realize we don’t know
- We are simultaneously unique and part of a whole
- Seeking happiness directly often prevents finding it
- The attempt to control creates the chaos feared
Step 2: Find the Natural Form
Let structure emerge from the paradox itself:
- Some paradoxes suggest circular narratives
- Others need parallel actions that mirror each other
- Some require reversal or inversion
- Others build through accumulation or reduction
Don’t force a predetermined structure. The paradox should dictate the shape.
Step 3: Character and Voice
Character Selection:
- Use archetypal figures (animals, natural forces, ancient beings)
- Names can be descriptive but avoid alliterative cuteness
- Let irony emerge naturally rather than forcing it
- Characters should feel like beings, not walking lessons
Voice and Tone:
- Maintain timeless quality of oral tradition
- Use simple, direct language that carries depth
- Allow for dry observation and subtle humor
- Avoid contemporary slang or dating references
Step 4: Add Witness Chorus
Most paradox fables benefit from multiple perspectives:
- Different characters see different facets of truth
- No single voice has complete understanding
- Together they form a picture protagonist cannot access
- Their observations illuminate but don’t resolve the paradox
Paradox-to-Fable Examples
Example 1: Action/Non-action
Paradox: Sometimes the most effective action is non-action Natural Form: A dialogue between River and Stone about who shapes the valley Key Insight: Their argument itself shapes what they’re arguing about
Example 2: Knowledge/Mystery
Paradox: The more we know, the more we realize we don’t know Natural Form: A progression narrative of someone learning names Key Insight: Naming everything removes the ability to see anything new
Example 3: Individual/Collective
Paradox: We are simultaneously unique and part of a whole Natural Form: Raindrops racing to reach the sea first Key Insight: They’re already part of the same water cycle
Example 4: Seeking/Finding
Paradox: What we seek often eludes us until we stop seeking Natural Form: A crow searching for the perfect shiny object Key Insight: The search itself becomes the trap
Evaluation Criteria
Questions to Test Your Fable
- Can you remove the paradox and still have the same story? (If yes, it’s not embodied)
- Does the ending feel satisfying despite lacking resolution?
- Could this be interpreted validly in at least three different ways?
- Does it feel timeless rather than contemporary?
- Would someone remember this and find new meanings over time?
- Does the structure feel inevitable rather than imposed?
- Can you explain the paradox without the fable? Can you understand it without explanation after reading?
Red Flags to Address
- The moral feels explicit or preachy
- Characters exist only to make a point
- The paradox is explained rather than experienced
- The ending provides false resolution
- The language feels precious or overwrought
- It feels derivative of existing cultural stories
Quality Control Checklist
Before considering complete:
- Read aloud – does it flow like oral tradition?
- Remove all explicit statements of the paradox – does it still work?
- Have three different people interpret it – do they see different things?
- Wait a week and reread – does it still feel fresh?
- Check against existing stories – are you unconsciously copying?
- Consider cultural lens – are you appropriating or stereotyping?
- Test the ending – does it maintain productive tension?
Cultural Sensitivity
When Creating Original Fables
- Draw from genuinely universal observations (water cycles, seasons, animal behaviors)
- Avoid appropriating specific cultural symbols or sacred narratives
- Research thoroughly if something feels familiar
- Use archetypal rather than culturally specific imagery
When Existing Stories Serve Better
- Reference and credit the original directly
- Provide cultural context when appropriate
- Don’t create inferior copies of existing wisdom stories
Applications
Within Larger Works:
- Chapter openings for relevant paradoxes
- Interstitial breathing spaces between sections
- Illustrative examples within analytical text
As Standalone Content:
- Discussion starters for community engagement
- Teaching tools for workshops
- Social media content for concept introduction
- Reader exercises: “Write your own fable for this paradox”
Workshop Prompts
For developing your own paradox fables:
- What natural process embodies your paradox?
- What character would believably trap themselves in this paradox?
- What would others see that the protagonist cannot?
- How can the ending maintain rather than resolve tension?
- What details make this feel timeless rather than contemporary?
Final Note
The best paradox fables feel discovered rather than constructed. They should seem like they’ve always existed, waiting to be noticed.
If you’re forcing it, set it aside. The right structure will emerge when the paradox is ready to be embodied in story.
Remember: The goal is not to resolve paradoxes but to help readers sit more comfortably in their tension.
Output Persistence
Output Discovery
- Check for
context/output-config.mdin the project - If found, look for this skill’s entry
- If not found, ask user: “Where should I save fable drafts?”
- Suggest:
stories/fables/orexplorations/stories/
Primary Output
- Paradox statement – The core tension being explored
- Natural form – Structure emerging from paradox
- Character and voice – Archetypal beings and tone
- Fable draft – Complete narrative
File Naming
Pattern: {paradox-name}-fable-{date}.md
Verification (Oracle)
What This Skill Can Verify
- Paradox embodied – Removing paradox breaks the story? (High confidence)
- Ending maintains tension – No simple moral emerges? (High confidence)
- Multiple interpretations – At least 3 valid readings? (Medium confidence)
What Requires Human Judgment
- Timelessness – Does it feel like oral tradition?
- Cultural sensitivity – Is it appropriating or universal?
- Reader discovery – Will readers find meaning over time?
Oracle Limitations
- Cannot assess whether fable resonates emotionally
- Cannot predict long-term meaning-making by readers
Feedback Loop
Session Persistence
- Output location: See
context/output-config.md - What to save: Paradox, form, characters, final draft
- Naming pattern:
{paradox-name}-fable-{date}.md
Cross-Session Learning
- Check for prior fables exploring similar paradoxes
- Reader interpretations inform success
- Failed embodiments inform anti-patterns
Design Constraints
This Skill Assumes
- A paradox worth embodying (real tension)
- Desire for unresolved wisdom (not simple moral)
- Comfort with ambiguity
This Skill Does Not Handle
- Traditional fables – Different structure (resolved morals)
- Prose craft – Route to: prose-style
- Cliché checking – Route to: cliche-transcendence
Degradation Signals
- Explicit moral stated within story
- Characters as walking allegories
- Paradox explained rather than experienced
Reasoning Requirements
Standard Reasoning
- Single paradox identification
- Basic form selection
- Simple character design
Extended Reasoning (ultrathink)
- Paradox-to-form discovery – [Why: structure must emerge naturally]
- Multi-layer witness chorus – [Why: different facets need coordination]
- Cultural sensitivity check – [Why: distinguishing universal from appropriated]
Trigger phrases: “find the natural form”, “design the witness chorus”, “check cultural sources”
Execution Strategy
Sequential (Default)
- Paradox before form
- Form before character
- Character before drafting
Parallelizable
- Exploring multiple possible forms
- Developing multiple paradoxes in parallel
Subagent Candidates
| Task | Agent Type | When to Spawn |
|---|---|---|
| Cultural research | general-purpose | When checking for existing stories |
| Reader testing | general-purpose | When seeking multiple interpretations |
Context Management
Approximate Token Footprint
- Skill base: ~2.5k tokens (principles + process + examples)
- With evaluation: ~3.5k tokens
- With workshop prompts: ~4k tokens
Context Optimization
- Focus on current paradox and form
- Examples are reference, not required
- Workshop prompts optional
When Context Gets Tight
- Prioritize: Current paradox, active form discovery
- Defer: Full example set, all evaluation criteria
- Drop: Workshop prompts, quality checklist
Anti-Patterns
1. Forced Moral
Pattern: Ending the fable with a clear lesson, explicit statement of the paradox, or resolution of the tension. Why it fails: The power of paradox fables is that they maintain tension. Resolved morals become forgettable advice. The reader should sit in the paradox, not receive an answer. Fix: Remove all explicit statements. If you can state the lesson, it’s not a paradox fable. End with the tension intact. Trust readers to find their own meaning.
2. Allegory Characters
Pattern: Characters that exist solely to represent ideasâthe Wise One, the Foolish Student, the Inevitable Force. Why it fails: Walking allegories feel preachy. Characters should be beings with their own existence, even if archetypal. The paradox emerges from their actions, not their labels. Fix: Give characters motivations beyond their symbolic function. Even a River arguing with a Stone should have genuine stakes in the argument, not just represent “action vs. stillness.”
3. Imposed Structure
Pattern: Forcing the paradox into a predetermined narrative structure rather than letting form emerge from content. Why it fails: Structure should serve paradox, not vice versa. When form is chosen before paradox is understood, the story feels artificial. The paradox should dictate whether it needs dialogue, progression, or revelation. Fix: Sit with the paradox until the natural form appears. Ask: how does this tension manifest in action? What character would trap themselves here? Let structure emerge.
4. Cultural Appropriation
Pattern: Using specific cultural symbols, sacred narratives, or traditional forms without understanding or attribution. Why it fails: Many paradox traditions are rooted in specific cultures. Borrowing surface elements without depth creates inferior copies and disrespects source traditions. Fix: Research thoroughly. If a story feels familiar, find the original and credit it. Draw from genuinely universal observations (water cycles, seasons) rather than culturally specific imagery.
5. Explanation Temptation
Pattern: Explaining the paradox within the story, having characters articulate what the story means. Why it fails: Explanation destroys the bypass. The power of paradox fables is that they work around analytical defenses. Once explained, the paradox becomes a puzzle with an answer. Fix: Remove all explanation. The paradox should be experienced through narrative, not understood through exposition. If readers need it explained, the embodiment failed.
Integration
Inbound (feeds into this skill)
| Skill | What it provides |
|---|---|
| prose-style | Language craft for timeless voice |
| cliche-transcendence | Avoiding obvious expressions and forms |
Outbound (this skill enables)
| Skill | What this provides |
|---|---|
| (teaching content) | Fables can open chapters, introduce concepts |
| (discussion material) | Community engagement tools |
Complementary
| Skill | Relationship |
|---|---|
| cliche-transcendence | Both fight default patternsâcliche-transcendence for story elements, paradox-fables for avoiding obvious morals |
| prose-style | Paradox-fables need timeless voice; prose-style provides craft techniques |