The peculiar string “deeper190316vinaskymakemefeelsomething better” inadvertently encodes a powerful affective design principle: deep first, then request improvement. This paper formalizes that principle and provides preliminary evidence. While not a real existing entity, the concept highlights how emotional AI might parse user exclamations into effective emotion regulation strategies.
Neuroscience tells us that our brains are wired for contrast. You cannot appreciate "better" without having known "worse." The user isn't asking for happiness. They are asking for better—a relative, achievable upgrade. deeper190316vinaskymakemefeelsomething better
If the current feeling is a 3/10, they want a 5/10. Not euphoria. Just relief. Just movement. Neuroscience tells us that our brains are wired for contrast
You don't need a timestamp or a name. Sit in silence for 10 minutes. Ask yourself: What happened on March 16, 2019 (or my own significant date)? Write the answer without stopping. The "deeper" is already inside you. " creating the phrase "MakeMeFeelSomething better."
The input string ends with the word "better," creating the phrase "MakeMeFeelSomething better."