Generate grounded Chinese reflections, aphorisms, maxims, quote-card lines, article endings, daily thoughts, or short "感悟" from the user's second brain, GBra...
---
name: second-brain-aphorism
description: Generate grounded Chinese reflections, aphorisms, maxims, quote-card lines, article endings, daily thoughts, or short "感悟" from the user's second brain, GBrain, llm-wiki, cognitive anchors, notes, and long-term questions. Use when the user asks for 感悟、箴言、金句、短句、每日一念、一段话、文章结尾、卡片文案, or asks to distill an idea from 第二大脑, GBrain, llm-wiki, wiki, notes, anchors, or personal knowledge context.
metadata:
slug: second-brain-maxim
version: 0.1.1
tags:
- second-brain
- gbrain
- llm-wiki
- aphorism
- reflection
- writing
- knowledge-management
openclaw:
requires:
bins:
- gbrain
env: []
os:
- linux
- darwin
- win32
hermes:
category: knowledge-management
tags:
- second-brain
- gbrain
- llm-wiki
- aphorism
- reflection
- writing
---
# Second Brain Aphorism
Use this skill to turn the user's second-brain material into a concise, personally grounded thought. The result should feel like a distilled insight from the user's own thinking, not a generic inspirational quote.
Default to Chinese unless the user asks for another language.
## Workflow
1. Clarify the requested shape only when necessary.
- If the user says "感悟", produce one short paragraph.
- If the user says "箴言", "金句", or "短句", produce concise aphoristic lines.
- If unspecified, produce one `感悟` and one compressed `箴言`.
2. Run lightweight second-brain recall.
- Prefer the user's local second brain over web knowledge.
- Resolve local paths without hardcoded personal information:
- Prefer `SECOND_BRAIN_WIKI_ROOT` when set.
- Otherwise try `$SECOND_BRAIN_ROOT/llm-wiki` when `SECOND_BRAIN_ROOT` is set.
- Otherwise try common user-local candidates such as `~/Hbrain/llm-wiki`.
- If no likely wiki root exists, infer it from the current project or ask one concise question.
- Once the wiki root is found, use:
- Core questions: `<wiki-root>/my-core-questions.md`
- Anchor index: `<wiki-root>/links/index.md`
- Read `my-core-questions.md` and `links/index.md` if they exist.
- Select 1-3 relevant anchor pages from `links/*.md` and read only those pages.
- Run focused recall when available:
```bash
gbrain search "<user's exact topic>" --limit 5
gbrain search "<selected anchor or close synonym>" --limit 5
cm context "<user's exact topic>" --json --limit 5 --history 5
```
3. Extract a "seed of tension" before writing.
- Name the lived tension: what is being pulled against what?
- Name the user's recurring anchor or long-term question.
- Name the practical turn: what changes in how one sees, chooses, or acts?
4. Generate the line or paragraph.
- Write from the recalled context, not from generic advice.
- Prefer concrete verbs, precise nouns, and a small paradox.
- Remove motivational filler, slogans, and abstract padding.
- If the recall is thin, be transparent and write a lower-confidence draft.
5. Present the result.
- For normal requests, output:
- `感悟:` one paragraph, 80-180 Chinese characters
- `箴言:` one line, 8-32 Chinese characters
- For batch requests, give 3-7 numbered candidates.
- Include a concise `第二大脑回路` receipt unless the user explicitly asks for copy-only output.
## Style Guide
Read `references/style-guide.md` when the user asks for a specific tone, more variants, quote-card copy, article endings, or when the first draft risks sounding generic.
## Grounding Rules
- Do not claim the user believes something unless it is supported by recall.
- Do not invent book titles, source notes, anchors, or personal experiences.
- Do not search the web unless the user explicitly asks for outside references.
- Do not write back to the second brain unless the user explicitly asks to save, archive, 沉淀, 写入, or update.
- If recall tools fail, continue with available anchor files and briefly state what failed.
## Writeback
Default to no writeback. When the user explicitly asks to save the result:
1. Choose the smallest durable target:
- `queries/` for reusable generated answers or quote collections.
- `concepts/` for a stable idea that should become a concept page.
- `links/` only when updating an existing cognitive anchor.
- `practices/` only when the output implies a repeatable routine.
2. Preserve existing frontmatter and content.
3. Add the generated line plus the recall receipt or source context.
4. Bump `updated` dates on edited wiki pages.
## Quality Checklist
- It can be traced to at least one recalled anchor, note, or core question.
- It says one thing sharply instead of three things vaguely.
- It contains a tension, reversal, or implication.
- It sounds like a private notebook becoming public for a moment.
- It remains useful even if stripped of decorative language.
don't have the plugin yet? install it then click "run inline in claude" again.