AI can be a useful tool for processing grief, but the quality of what emerges depends on how precisely you frame your request—much like therapy itself, specificity matters more than eloquence. Learning to ask AI detailed questions about your loss, rather than vague ones, helps you excavate what you actually need to think through rather than receiving generic reflections.
Prompt engineering sounds technical, but it's really just "asking better questions." In grief work, the difference between a helpful AI response and a useless one often comes down to how you frame your request.
Think of it like the difference between asking someone "Was my dad cool?" versus "Tell me about a time when my dad made me feel proud." The second question gets a better answer because it's specific.
Here's a bad prompt: "Help me write about my loss."
Here's a good one: "My father died six months ago from a heart attack. We didn't have a close relationship, but he was proud of my career. I want to write a letter to him about something he never got to see—my promotion. Can you suggest what I should include in this letter?"
The second one works because the AI knows: who died, how long ago, what the relationship was like, and exactly what you're trying to accomplish.
In grief, specificity is kindness—to yourself and to the AI. Vague requests give vague answers. Detailed requests give responses that actually feel like they're for *your* situation, not a generic template.
Another trick: tell the AI *what tone* you want. "I want this to be respectful but also funny, because he had a sense of humor." This shapes every word the AI generates.
Try this: Write down a grief question you've been wanting to ask an AI. Then rewrite it using the five-part formula. Include the name, one relationship detail, what you're trying to do, what matters about this person, and what kind of help you need. Notice how specific it feels now.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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