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Haiku Living Reading

The Presence We Keep Deferring

I have so many unread articles saved to Instapaper that I’ve stopped checking the count. Each one felt, in the moment of saving it, like something I needed. A long piece on urban planning, a profile of someone interesting, a reported essay I fully intended to sit with.

The app is beautifully designed for exactly this — the frictionless capture, the clean reading interface waiting patiently on the other side.

What it can’t do is manufacture the attention I didn’t have when I saved it and still don’t have now. The articles aren’t the problem. The premise is: that presence is something you can bank.

There’s a haiku I keep returning to, from Natalie Goldberg’s Three Simple Lines. It’s by a poet named Fumiko Harada:

Morning chill
I savor this moment —
one meeting one lifetime

Eleven words. No verb in the third line, which makes it feel less like a thought and more like a verdict.

The Japanese concept underneath it is ichi-go ichi-e — loosely, “one time, one meeting.” It’s a Zen idea with origins in the tea ceremony, the understanding that each gathering is singular and therefore irreversible. You cannot archive it. You cannot search for it later. When it ends, it doesn’t go anywhere you can retrieve.

This is what the Instapaper queue is, at scale: an archive of moments I decided to experience later. The article about urban planning was written by someone who spent months reporting it, on a day when some editor thought it was ready, and landed in my feed on a morning when something about the headline caught me. That constellation doesn’t reassemble. Later is a different article.

The tools I use every day are getting astonishing. There are systems that can summarize, translate, recall, explain, anticipate. I use them. I find them genuinely useful.

But there’s a habit of mind they reward — a kind of perpetual deferral of full attention — that I haven’t fully reckoned with. The promise, always, is that you can engage more completely later, once the summary is ready, once the transcript exists, once the notes have been taken. Presence becomes a productivity tax you pay while waiting for a deliverable.

Harada’s haiku doesn’t moralize. The speaker isn’t lecturing herself into awareness. She’s just cold, and awake, and choosing to notice. I savor this moment. The word “savor” does a lot of work. It implies effort. You savor things that could be missed.

The pivot in the third line is what stays with me. One meeting one lifetime. Not “this meeting will last a lifetime” — that would be sentiment. It’s more like a mathematical statement: the cardinality of this encounter is one. There is exactly one of them. This morning, this particular chill, whatever conversation or solitude is happening inside it — that set has one element. By tomorrow it has zero. No amount of documentation changes that arithmetic.

I’m working on believing that.

Categories
Google Bard Haiku

Haiku with Google Bard

Last December I experimented a bit with the then new at the time ChatGPT writing haiku. It turns out that particular post has been quite popular – among the most visited since I shared it.

This morning I set out to use Google Bard (now powered by the Gemini Pro model) to write haiku using the same prompts as last year with ChatGPT. Here are the results – which I also find very enjoyable!

Note: The image above was created using Bing’s Image Creator powered by OpenAI’s DALL-E 3.

Write a haiku about film photography

Sun paints on silver,
A patient click, time captured still,
Light’s memory held.

Write a haiku about a quiet morning in a boat on a lake

Mist hugs sleeping reeds,
Oars dip, a whisper in glass,
Sun’s kiss wakes the lake.

Write a haiku about snow falling on cedars

Jade boughs bow with grace,
Each flake a silent, feathered kiss,
Whispers on the breeze.

Write a haiku about stillness in Kyoto

Temple bells toll slow,
Bamboo sighs in ancient shade,
Stone gardens breathe deep.

Write a haiku about watching the first rain of the year

Parched earth drinks the first sip,
Rooftop whispers secrets soft,
Green whispers unfurl.

Write a haiku about geese flying overhead

With beating wings that cleave the sky, A honking skein in chevroned flight, Winter’s wild grace calls.

Write a haiku about farming with a John Deere tractor

Green giant hums low,
Iron claws till earth’s slumbering heart,
Seeds dream of sunlit rows.

Write a haiku about writing haiku

Few words paint a world,
Seventeen whispers hold the breath,
A flower unfolds.

And now for a few more…

Write a haiku about visiting Stockholm in late December

Crisp air, cobblestones gleam,
Candles flicker in frosty shops,
Lucia’s crown ablaze.

Write a haiku about walking across the Golden Gate Bridge in fog

Towers pierce white mist,
Footsteps echo, lost in air,
City sleeps unseen.

Write a haiku about the joys of Christmas with family and friends

Laughter fills the hearth,
Gifts unwrapped, eyes shining bright,
Love warms winter’s breath.

Write five haiku about the joys of walking a dog in the park on a cool grey morning

Crisp air nips at cheeks,
Tail wags a metronome beat,
Leaves crunch under paws.

Squirrels taunt from oaks,
Bark explodes in joyous chase,
Frisbee paints the sky.

Dew kissed blades stand tall,
Golden fur a furry sunbeam,
Sniffs of morning dew.

Pigeons flutter up,
Startled by a playful lunge,
Laughter fills the park.

Back to leash, head home,
Whiskers twitching, ears perked high,
Memories in paws.

And then I asked Google Bard for some judgment:

Which one is the best?

I think the fourth haiku is the best! It captures the playful energy of a dog walk in the park, as well as the delightful surprise of the startled pigeons and the shared laughter between dog and owner.

Here’s why I think it stands out:

  • Vivid imagery: The line “Pigeons flutter up” creates a clear picture in the reader’s mind, and the “Startled by a playful lunge” adds a touch of humor.
  • Sound: The “Laughter fills the park” adds another sensory element to the haiku, making it feel more immersive.
  • Connection: The laughter shared between dog and owner highlights the joy and companionship that comes from spending time with our furry friends.

Overall, I think the fourth haiku is the most evocative and memorable of the bunch. It’s a great example of how haiku can capture a moment in time and leave a lasting impression on the reader.

Of course, the best haiku is ultimately a matter of personal preference. Some people might prefer the serene beauty of the first haiku, or the joyful chase of the second. But I believe the fourth haiku stands out for its combination of vivid imagery, sound, and connection, making it a truly delightful read.

Categories
AI AI: Large Language Models AI: Prompting Bing Chat ChatGPT Claude Google Bard Haiku

Crafting Effective Prompts for Your AI Assistant (Claude, ChatGPT, Bard, etc.)

webpage of chatgpt a prototype ai chatbot is seen on the website of openai on iphone or smartphone
Photo by Sanket Mishra on Pexels.com

Interacting with an AI assistant like Claude is a two-way conversation. To get the most out of your digital assistant, you need to know how to provide useful prompts that set it up for success. Follow these prompt writing tips when chatting with your AI:

Be Direct and Clear

Don’t beat around the bush when posing questions or requests to your AI assistant. Vague or ambiguous prompts will lead to vague and ambiguous responses from the AI. Get straight to the point and be as specific as possible about what you want it to do. Break down complex instructions into simple, step-by-step prompts to guide the AI.

Provide Sufficient Background

Don’t assume your AI assistant has any implied common sense or knowledge about your request. The AI only knows what’s in its training data! Give sufficient background and context in your prompts to set the AI up to respond appropriately. If you’re asking about a specific person or event the AI isn’t likely familiar with, give a brief explanation.

Ask Focused Questions

Open-ended questions can sometimes lead your chatbot down useless tangents. If you want specific info, ask specific follow-up questions rather than overly broad ones. You’ll get better results by being laser-focused on the information you need.

Check Responses and Follow Up

Your AI assistant is learning all the time. Check its responses to see if they actually provide what you were looking for, and follow up if it seems off track. You can rephrase your original prompt or ask clarifying questions to get the AI back on a useful path. Consider it a collaborative process.

Test the Limits

Feel free to get creative in testing the limits of your AI assistant’s capabilities. Novel prompts encourage the AI to expand what it can handle. Just be sure to provide plenty of guidance and background if you’re requesting something unusual or complex.

Give Your AI a Role to Play

When chatting with your AI assistant, it can be hugely beneficial to explicitly give it a role to play, such as teacher, travel agent, cooking assistant, or even friend. Defining a role provides necessary context that your AI needs to adapt its responses and language appropriately.

Without any framing, your assistant has no way of knowing how to act or what kind of information you need. A vague conversation with an undefined AI assistant can quickly go off the rails. But when you assign a clear role, it focuses the dialogue and reduces misunderstandings.

The role you give your AI doesn’t have to be rigid or limiting. Think of it as providing a general framing, tone, and personality that fits your needs for that particular conversation. Just tell your assistant “Act as my tutor and explain this concept to me.” Or “Pretend you’re a museum tour guide and describe this painting.”

Taking on a role allows your AI to access the right knowledge, terminology, and communication style to have a productive, natural dialogue. With the power of role-playing, your AI assistant can become an even more effective conversation partner!

Some Prompt Examples You Can Try

To see your AI assistant’s skills in action, give some longer, more descriptive prompts like these a try:

  • “Imagine you are an art museum tour guide named Sam leading a group through the impressionist gallery. In an enthusiastic but professional tone, explain the key characteristics of Monet’s painting style and describe what makes his Water Lilies painting a quintessential example of impressionism.”
  • “Act as a friendly chess tutor named Alex teaching me, a novice player, strategies for the first 10 moves as white in a classic game opening. Use simple, straightforward language to clearly explain the objectives of different standard openings and why they are solid foundational openings for white.”
  • “Pretend you are a home repair specialist named Jamie and I’m a customer needing help fixing my broken kitchen faucet. Walk me step-by-step through how to remove the faucet handle, disassemble and inspect the internal parts, replace any faulty washers or O-rings, and reassemble everything to get the faucet working again.”
  • “You’re an accomplished pastry chef named Pat teaching me how to bake chocolate chip cookies from scratch. Explain in a warm, patient tone the key steps from mixing dry and wet ingredients properly to getting the baking time and temperature right. Share any tips to ensure the cookies turn out perfectly chewy.”
  • “Imagine you are a professional genealogist named Gene helping me trace my ancestry. I’ve hit a roadblock finding records about my great-grandfather who I believe was born in Ireland around 1885 before immigrating to New York City. In a warm, encouraging tone provide step-by-step guidance for how to locate passenger manifests, naturalization records, birth/marriage/death certificates, and other documents that could shed light on his origins and immigration journey. Feel free to ask clarifying questions if you need any additional details from me. Your role is to patiently coach me through breaking through this genealogy brick wall using targeted record searches.”

Prompt for Haiku

To showcase your AI’s creative writing skills, try a prompt like:

  • “Write a haiku poem about viewing cherry blossoms in spring. Describe the delicate pink flowers blooming on branches and scattering in the wind. Convey a tranquil, reflective mood. Follow the 5-7-5 haiku structure with 3 lines and appropriate season word.”

This provides context about the haiku’s theme, asks the AI to use descriptive language and imagery, gives guidance on mood and structure, and defines the specific creative writing form. Framing poetic prompts in this way allows your AI to tap into its artistic expression. You can guide it to compose haiku, limericks, sonnets, and more on any topic you choose!

See also my post about writing haiku with ChatGPT.

Summary

Giving longer prompts with more conversational detail and specific instructions allows your AI assistant to generate richer, more natural responses. Don’t be afraid to really set the scene and adopt a persona when framing your requests! For even more, see my post Multi-step prompting for Claude.

Please share what you’ve learned about effective prompts that you’ve discovered!

Credit: Drafted with the assistance of Claude, an AI assistant created by Anthropic.

Categories
AI ChatGPT Haiku

Haiku with ChatGPT

Note: see also Haiku with Google Bard.

Like over a million others, I’ve been enjoying playing with the new ChatGPT tool from OpenAI.com. Among many other things, ChatGPT can help generate haiku – here are some examples from a recent session of mine:

Write a haiku about film photography

In moments captured
Light on film, forever frozen
Art of the past lives

Write a haiku about a quiet morning in a boat on a lake

Quiet morning calm
Ripples gently lap the shore
Birds in harmony

Write a haiku about snow falling on cedars

Snowflakes fall like tears
Upon the cedars’ green boughs
Winter’s silent grace

Write a haiku about stillness in Kyoto

In the still of night
Kyoto’s ancient temples bask
In the moon’s soft glow

Write a haiku about watching the first rain of the year

First rain of the year
Falling gently from the sky
Refreshing the earth

Write a haiku about geese flying overhead

Geese fly in formation
Honking as they pass overhead
Autumn’s wild symphony

Write a haiku about farming with a John Deere tractor

Green John Deere tractor
Plowing fields under bright blue sky
Farming’s steadfast work

Write a haiku about writing haiku

Ink flows from my pen
Expressing thoughts in simple verse
Haiku, my meditation

Try it ChatGPT yourself with a free account at OpenAI.com. Image created using DiffusionBee with the phrase: “a painting of an poet in a red beret writing haiku on a paper tablet”