- What ChatGPT says
Manifesting Generator — cheat sheet
- Share of population: often said ~33% (Generators ~70% incl. MG).
- Aura: open & enveloping (like Generators) + a “burst” capacity (from the Manifestor side).
- Strategy:
- Wait to respond (let life present something), then inform affected people, then act.
- 👆 This resonates a huge amount. I’m not an ideas guy, I don’t have a grand vision, but when something really great falls across my lap I can get very engaged
- Wait to respond (let life present something), then inform affected people, then act.
- Inner authority (how to decide):
- usually Sacral (gut “uh-huh/uh-uh”), or Emotional (ride the wave, decide after it settles). Less commonly Splenic/Ego.
- 👆 Feels true - trust intuition and enthusiasm over thinking
- usually Sacral (gut “uh-huh/uh-uh”), or Emotional (ride the wave, decide after it settles). Less commonly Splenic/Ego.
- Signature (what good feels like):
- Satisfaction (often with a side of Peace after initiating).
- **Not-self theme (what misalignment feels like):
- ** Frustration (plus Anger if you initiate without informing).
What makes MGs distinct
- Non-linear, multi-pass: you move fast, skip steps, prototype, course-correct on the fly. Finishing can require looping back.
- 👆 Very true, I hate the idea of doing something in a strict orderly sequence
- Makes me think of the Hermeneutic circle, hermeneutic spiral → it feels great to go from atomic to gestalt and then return to atomic and keep building up
- Multi-passionate:
- it’s normal to have several tracks; dropping one isn’t “quitting,” it’s freeing energy for what’s alive now.
- Throttle control:
- when the sacral lights up, you can go from zero to sixty. Informing keeps others from feeling “blasted.”
- 👆 I think what this is saying is “when you become engaged with a thing, you immediately have loads of energy for it” , which feels very true
- when the sacral lights up, you can go from zero to sixty. Informing keeps others from feeling “blasted.”
How to work with it (practical)
- Prime the sacral: turn decisions into yes/no prompts (“Do I want to run this workshop tonight?”). Listen for uh-huh/uh-uh in the body.
- This has been a huge learning journey for me and it has started to feel really good
- Saying no to stuff has been some of the happiest/most alive moments of my life, lol
- Wait to respond: scan for incoming stimuli—requests, pings, problems, a thing on the street—then act on the ones that light you up.
- Inform before you burst: one line to stakeholders: “I’m going to try X for 20 min; I’ll loop back.” It reduces resistance.
- Prototype > plan: build a scrappy v0, test, iterate. Your speed is the feature.
- Satisfaction metric: if you end the day satisfied > 60% of the time, you’re on track; persistent frustration = change inputs or timing.
- Energy hygiene: move your body daily and use up sacral energy; MGs tend to sleep better after physical output.
- Calendar guardrails: short blocks (25–50 min), context labels, and visible “parking lots” so you can jump without losing threads.
- Quit cleanly: when the gut goes cold, inform, wrap, and reallocate. Don’t force it.
Common MG pitfalls (and fixes)
- Starting without response → anger/friction.
Fix: collect 3+ clear “responses” (requests, signs, invites) before launching. - Over-promising, under-finishing.
Fix: define “done for now” criteria for each project; ship in increments. - People feel blindsided.
Fix: default to micro-informing: who’s impacted, what you’re doing, when you’ll update. - Decision fuzziness (Emotional authority).
Fix: sleep on big choices; if it isn’t a yes at multiple points on the wave, it’s a no for now.
Relationships & team play
- Best asks for you: “Can you give me a yes/no on X?” “Want to try a 20-min spike on Y?”
- What you offer: rapid prototyping, energizing execution, creative rerouting when plans stall.
- What you need: permission to pivot, clear lanes, and quick feedback loops.
2-week experiment (simple)
- Days 1–3: turn every choice <5 min into a yes/no prompt; log your gut response vs. what you did.
- Days 4–7: only pursue tasks that got an uh-huh or arrived via clear external request; micro-inform before starting.
- Week 2: run two 45-min sprints/day on the most alive task; end with a “satisfaction score” (0–10) + one sentence on what created it.
If you want, tell me your authority (if you know it) and the kinds of decisions you’re making this week, and I’ll tailor prompts and one-liners you can literally paste into messages to “inform before acting.”