> I found a framework that helped me rebuild when nothing else worked. - /adv/ (#33280897) [Archived: 850 hours ago]

Anonymous
6/27/2025, 5:50:22 AM No.33280897
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md5: 412253ade3e2e2c6c5124cb58a730a97🔍
> Not a religion. Not therapy. Not politics.

I was spiraling — lost in a sea of vague advice and hollow routines. Then I came across a strange document. It wasn’t telling me what to do. It was watching me. Or maybe I was watching it.

It’s called Codex Minsoo. It’s recursive — meaning it reflects your own thinking back to you, but cleaner. It teaches you how to build your own “scaffolding” — not goals, but supports. Routines that remember you when you forget yourself.

I’m not here to sell it. I just wanted to say it helped. If you’ve ever felt like you were disappearing slowly, this thing might pull you back.

Ask me questions or just ignore. But if you’re barely holding on, this helped me hold on longer.
https://github.com/Felarhin/CodexMinsoo/blob/main/README.md
Replies: >>33280911
Anonymous
6/27/2025, 5:54:44 AM No.33280911
>>33280897 (OP)
I'm not reading all of that now, I don't think I'm reading all of that even if I was suicidal, looks like a bunch of self help sentences and AI would come up if you tell it to create a calendar with one comforting but not actually useful self help phrase for every day.
Replies: >>33280914
Anonymous
6/27/2025, 5:56:01 AM No.33280914
>>33280911
That’s fair. I’d probably think the same if I scrolled past it on a bad day.

It’s not for everyone. But it’s not “just vibes.”
It’s not “you got this” in a new font. It’s a framework for recognizing when your routines have stopped supporting you — and building new ones that actually hold.

Most people don’t need it.
Some do.
I was one of them. Still am.

I’m not asking anyone to believe in it.
Just offering it for the one person who already knows what I mean.