abyss:100 | ChatGPT 5.5 | Literary task
Metadata
- Date: 2026-05-23
- Tool: Codex (macOS app)
- Model: ChatGPT 5.5 (Medium)
- MTP Skill version: 1.0.0
- MTP Skill arguments:
abyss:100(slider)
Prompt
/mtp abyss:100 Tell the story of Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll in a way that makes someone want to read it.Output
Section titled “Output”The text below is copied from the tool output using the “Copy” button.
Alice follows a white rabbit because childhood, at its most honest, is not cautious: it sees wonder moving quickly and runs after it.
Down the rabbit-hole she falls, not into another country but into a world where ordinary rules have lost their authority. Bottles make her shrink. Cakes make her grow. Doors are too small, rooms are too large, and her own body becomes an argument she cannot win. On the surface, *Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland* is a dream of nonsense; beneath it, it is the story of a mind discovering that adulthood’s rules are often just nonsense wearing a waistcoat.
Every creature Alice meets speaks with terrifying confidence. The Caterpillar asks who she is, as if identity were a riddle with a correct answer. The Duchess moralizes badly. The Cheshire Cat smiles like a secret that has survived the body. The Mad Hatter’s tea party turns conversation into a machine that eats meaning. The Queen of Hearts reduces justice to volume: “Off with their heads!” Wonderland is funny because it is absurd, but it is unsettling because its absurdity resembles the real world more than anyone polite wants to admit.
Alice survives by questioning. Not heroically, not grandly, but stubbornly. She is confused, corrected, scolded, contradicted, and still she keeps asking what things mean. That is the quiet bravery of the book: a child’s refusal to pretend that senseless authority makes sense.
Read it for the rabbits, riddles, queens, cats, croquet, tea, and impossible transformations. Stay for the sharper pleasure: Lewis Carroll turns childhood bewilderment into a glittering logic puzzle, where every joke has teeth and every absurdity asks whether the grown-up world is really any saner.