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flow:50 | 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: flow:50 (slider)

Prompt

/mtp flow:50 Tell the story of Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll in a way that makes someone want to read it.

The text below is copied from the tool output using the “Copy” button.

Alice follows a white rabbit down a hole and falls out of the ordinary world.
What waits below is not a kingdom with clear rules, but a dream with teeth: a hallway of locked doors, a bottle that says “Drink Me,” a cake that changes her size, and the strange discovery that growing up and shrinking down can happen in the same afternoon. Alice is sensible, curious, and often indignant, which is exactly why Wonderland is so funny. It keeps asking her to accept nonsense, and she keeps trying to answer it with manners, logic, and questions.
The deeper she goes, the stranger the company becomes. A hookah-smoking Caterpillar asks who she is, and Alice realizes she is not entirely sure anymore. The Cheshire Cat grins from a tree and explains that everyone here is mad, including her. At the Mad Tea-Party, time itself has stopped, so the Hatter, the March Hare, and the Dormouse are trapped forever at tea, arguing in circles as if confusion were a game.
Then Wonderland turns royal and dangerous. Alice enters the Queen of Hearts’ garden, where playing cards paint white roses red because mistakes can cost them their heads. Croquet is played with flamingos for mallets and hedgehogs for balls. A trial is held where evidence barely matters, witnesses make things worse, and the Queen’s favorite solution is always execution.
But Alice is changing. At first she is lost inside Wonderland’s rules; by the end, she sees through them. The terrifying court becomes ridiculous. The powerful are only cards. The dream collapses, and Alice wakes beside her sister, carrying back the memory of a world where language wriggles, authority blusters, and childhood imagination refuses to sit still.
Read it because it is not just a children’s adventure. It is a comedy of logic, a satire of grown-up seriousness, and one of the rare books that still feels freshly strange every time you open it.