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helix: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: helix:100 (slider)

Prompt

/mtp helix:100 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.

First Alice is bored. Then a white rabbit runs past, worried about the time. Therefore she follows him, and the world tips.
Down the rabbit-hole she falls, past cupboards and maps and impossible thoughts, until she lands in a place where sense behaves badly. Bottles tell her to drink. Cakes tell her to eat. She shrinks, grows, cries a pool of tears, and swims through her own confusion with a mouse who is just as offended as everyone else she meets.
Wonderland is not a kingdom so much as a dream with teeth. A caterpillar smokes and asks who she is. A Duchess nurses a baby that becomes a pig. A Cheshire Cat grins until only the grin remains. At a tea party, the Hatter and the March Hare have murdered time and must live forever at six o’clock, pouring tea into riddles with no answers.
Alice keeps trying to be polite, rational, and well-behaved. Wonderland keeps proving that politeness, rationality, and good behavior are not enough when the rules change every minute. That is the fun of it: she argues back. She gets frightened, but she does not become small inside. Even when she is literally changing size, she keeps testing the world with questions.
At last she reaches the Queen of Hearts, who rules by shouting “Off with their heads!” over games of croquet played with flamingos and hedgehogs. There is a trial, too, though it is less interested in justice than in nonsense dressed up as authority. By then Alice has learned something powerful: if the whole court is made of cards, perhaps one brave child can stand up and say so.
Read it because it is funny, strange, sharp, and still alive. It feels like childhood, but not the soft kind. It is childhood as bewilderment, courage, irritation, curiosity, and the wild suspicion that adults may be making everything up as they go.