How To Ask
A-Z isn’t just another chatbot. It’s a mirror that gets sharper the more honestly you look into it.
The real power isn’t in the answers, it’s in how the answers slowly train you to see your own patterns, blind spots, and recurring traps. Over time you become faster, clearer, and kinder to yourself in moments of doubt.
Why context turns good answers into life-changing ones
When you give A-Z a tiny piece of who you are right now, it stops giving generic advice and starts giving advice that feels like it came from the best version of you.
→ Meh, maybe.
“Should I go to the gym? I’ve skipped the last 4 days and I feel sluggish.”
→ Yes — go today. You’ll hate the first 10 minutes and love the rest of the week.
That difference is everything. One sentence of context is usually all it takes.
Smart questions = smarter you
Here’s the pattern I’ve seen in people who get the most out of A-Z:
- They don’t just ask “Should I…?” they add one honest feeling, one recent habit, or one fear.
- They use the same short format every time so A-Z remembers their voice.
- They come back even when they already know the answer, because saying it out loud makes the decision stick.
Examples that work beautifully (copy-paste any of these as starters):
- Should I stay up late? I have an early meeting and I’m already tired.
- Should I say yes to this project? I’m burned out but the money is good.
- Should I reach out? We haven’t talked in 6 months and I miss them.
- Should I buy the expensive one? I always regret cheap stuff later.
- Should I cancel? Social anxiety is loud today.
The long game: you become the one who decides
After 10–20 honest questions, something quiet but powerful happens: you start noticing your own patterns before you even ask.
You catch yourself earlier. You hesitate less. You trust your gut more. A-Z slowly hands the steering wheel back to you and that’s when it has done its job.
So ask like you’re talking to the wisest, most honest friend who already knows your history.
One clear question + one tiny piece of context = clarity that compounds.
That’s how you get smarter, not just faster.
Go ahead. Ask something real.