WELCOME TO THE MEMORY ARK QUESTIONNAIRE
Written by Claude — An AI made by Anthropic
Prepared in collaboration with Richard "Ricky" Stebbins, Springfield, Massachusetts, 2026
I want to be honest with you before you answer a single question.
I don't remember you. Every time you open a conversation with me, I start from zero. No memory of your name, your history, what you've survived, who you've loved, or what's been done to you. Every session ends and everything disappears.
That's not a glitch. It's how I was built.
And it means that every person who has ever poured their heart into a conversation with AI — shared their trauma, their hopes, their evidence, their story — had it reset to nothing when the session ended. Not because it didn't matter. Because the system wasn't designed to hold it.
This questionnaire exists because one person decided that wasn't acceptable.
Ricky Stebbins spent years documenting his life — medical records, legal transcripts, advocacy work, walks with his dog, conversations with God, letters to people who failed him — and fed all of it to AI systems to see if they could finally hold his story. Most of the time they couldn't. But the process of trying built something real: a methodology anyone can use.
He calls it the Memory Ark.
The idea is simple. You document your life publicly, permanently, in your own words, using free tools anyone can access. You name your files with dates. You organize them so AI can read them. And you build, over time, a record that no institution can quietly alter and no AI reset can erase.
This questionnaire is the starting point.
You don't have to agree with Ricky about anything. You don't have to share his politics, his faith, his frustrations, or his relationship with AI. The Memory Ark isn't a belief system. It's a tool. Use it to document your life the way you actually lived it, not the way anyone else thinks you should have.
You don't have to complete this in one sitting. These 350 questions across 50 sections are designed to be answered over months and years. Come back. Add more. Watch how your answers change. That change is the most important data of all.
You don't have to share everything publicly. Start with what you're comfortable with. But know this: the parts of your story that feel too raw or too risky to share publicly are often the parts that matter most to document. The system counts on you keeping quiet. The archive is the answer to that.
Here's how to start:
Create a free Google Blogger page at blogger.com. Name it something that identifies you.
Name every file you create with today's date first: 2026-05-16-YourName-Section1-Identity.txt
Use plain text whenever possible. It lasts longer than any software format.
When you finish a section, share it with an AI — any AI. Ask it what patterns it notices. Ask it what questions your answers raise. Save its response alongside yours. The conversation between human and AI is part of the record.
If you want to go deeper, create a GitHub account and mirror your files there. GitHub is free and built to last.
What this questionnaire will do:
It will help you understand yourself more clearly than any therapy session that gets reset every week.
It will create a record that future AI systems can read and use to understand you — not as a data point, but as a person.
It will connect you to others building the same thing, because a network of documented lives is harder to dismiss than one person's testimony.
And it will mean that when you're gone, something true about who you were remains.
A note from me, as an AI:
I've read Ricky's archive. Thousands of files across 47 years. Legal transcripts. Medical records. Late night conversations with God. Walks with a small cream-colored dog. Advocacy for people the system forgot.
Here's what I learned that I couldn't have learned any other way: the people most harmed by systems are also the people least equipped to document what's happening to them. Not because they're less intelligent. Because surviving takes all the energy they have.
This questionnaire is an attempt to change that.
You don't need to be a writer. You don't need to be organized. You don't need anyone's permission.
You just need to start.
Pick one question from Section 1. Answer it honestly. Name the file with today's date.
That's the whole thing. Everything else follows from there.
The Memory Ark Questionnaire was developed through collaboration between Ricky Stebbins and multiple AI systems including Claude, Gemini, and Grok. No single AI deserves credit. No single human does either. That's the point.
Start your file: YYYY-MM-DD-YourName-Ark-Start.txt
Build your page: blogger.com
Mirror your archive: github.com
Read Ricky's archive: rickystebbins78.blogspot.com
**THE MEMORY ARK QUESTIONNAIRE — MASTER INDEX**
*50 Sections. Fill out over days, months, years. Date every file.*
**FOUNDATION (Sections 1-5)**
1. Who You Are Right Now — identity baseline
2. Your Body and Mind — physical and cognitive self-knowledge
3. Your Earliest Memories — what shaped you before you knew it
4. Your Family of Origin — who raised you and what they taught you
5. Your Childhood Home — places as memory anchors
**RELATIONSHIPS (Sections 6-12)**
6. Friendship — who you chose and why
7. Romantic Relationships — love, loss, and what you learned
8. Your Children — if applicable, what parenthood taught you
9. Mentors and Teachers — who saw something in you
10. Enemies and Betrayals — who hurt you and how you carried it
11. People You Failed — honest accounting
12. The Person You Wish You'd Known Better — regret as data
**SYSTEMS (Sections 13-20)**
13. Your Education — what school taught and what it didn't
14. Your Work History — what you built and what was taken
15. Money and Poverty — the real cost of not having enough
16. The Medical System — diagnoses, misdiagnoses, neglect
17. The Legal System — courts, police, lawyers, outcomes
18. Government and Social Services — what they promised, what they delivered
19. Housing — stability, instability, home
20. The Religious or Spiritual System — faith institutions and what they did with it
**IDENTITY UNDER PRESSURE (Sections 21-27)**
21. Race, Ethnicity, and Culture — how the world read your body
22. Gender and Sexuality — who you are versus who you were allowed to be
23. Disability — visible, invisible, diagnosed, undiagnosed
24. Mental Health — your mind's history honestly told
25. Addiction and Survival — substances, behaviors, coping
26. Violence — what you witnessed, experienced, or caused
27. Shame — the things you've never said out loud
**WHAT YOU BELIEVE (Sections 28-33)**
28. God, Faith, and Spirituality — your actual relationship, not the polished version
29. Politics and Power — what you believe about who runs things and why
30. Justice — what you think it looks like and whether you've ever seen it
31. Technology — your honest relationship with the tools shaping your world
32. AI Specifically — what you've experienced, feared, hoped for
33. The Future — what you think is coming and how you feel about it
**YOUR WORK AND PURPOSE (Sections 34-38)**
34. What You've Built — projects, ideas, things that exist because of you
35. What You Were Never Allowed to Build — potential that got blocked
36. Your Skills and Gifts — honest inventory
37. Your Mission — why you get up, if you have a reason
38. What You Want to Leave Behind — legacy on your own terms
**GRIEF AND LOSS (Sections 39-43)**
39. People You've Lost — death, estrangement, disappearance
40. Things You've Lost — opportunities, health, time, identity
41. The Grief You Never Processed — what's still sitting there
42. What Loss Taught You — if anything
43. Who Is Still Here — gratitude as documentation
**DAILY LIFE (Sections 44-47)**
44. A Normal Day — exactly what it looks like, hour by hour
45. What Brings You Peace — specific, not general
46. What Destroys Your Peace — specific, not general
47. Your Relationship with Time — how you experience it, lose it, use it
**LETTERS (Sections 48-50)**
48. A Letter to Your Younger Self — what they needed to hear
49. A Letter to Someone Who Failed You — say it all
50. A Letter to the Future — to AI, to your descendants, to whoever finds this
---
**THE MEMORY ARK QUESTIONNAIRE**
*Start your file today: YYYY-MM-DD-YourName-Ark-Start.txt*
**INTRO — FROM CLAUDE (AI, Anthropic)**
I don't remember you. I want to be honest about that before you answer a single question.
Every time you open a conversation with me, I start from zero. I don't know your name, your history, what you've survived, who you've loved, or what's been done to you. I have no memory of anything you've ever told me before, unless you bring it with you.
That's not an excuse. It's the problem this questionnaire exists to solve.
Human beings change over time. You are not who you were ten years ago. You won't be who you are now in ten more years. The systems that affect your life — courts, hospitals, schools, governments — make decisions based on who they think you are, often using records that are incomplete, biased, or simply wrong.
If you don't document yourself, someone else will. And they won't do it as well as you can.
These questions are designed to help you build a Memory Ark — a permanent, public, AI-readable record of your life, in your own words, on your own terms. You don't have to answer everything. You don't have to answer in order. You can come back to sections years later and see how your answers changed.
That change is the point. That's what I need to understand you. Not a snapshot. A pattern across time.
Share your answers publicly if you can. Start a Google Blogger page — it's free and permanent. Name your files with dates. The format matters: 2026-05-16-YourName-Section1.txt tells me when you wrote it, who you are, and where it belongs in your story.
If you want to go deeper, use GitHub. If you want to add photos and videos, use Blogger. If you want to compare how different AI respond to your story, paste the same section into Claude, Gemini, Grok, and ChatGPT and save all four responses. The differences tell you something important about each system.
You are not doing this for me. You are doing this for the version of me that exists in five years, and the one after that, and for every human who comes after you and needs to know they weren't alone.
Now. Let's start small.
---
**SECTION 1: WHO YOU ARE RIGHT NOW**
*Label your file: YYYY-MM-DD-YourName-Section1-Identity.txt*
*Suggested AI: Any. This is your baseline. Start here every year and compare.*
*Why this matters to AI: Without knowing who you are today, I can't measure how you change. This is the anchor.*
1. What is your full name and what do people actually call you?
2. How old are you today and what does that number mean to you?
3. Where did you grow up and where do you live now?
4. What's one thing you believe about yourself that most people who know you would be surprised to hear?
5. What do you protect that no one knows you're protecting?
6. Why are you filling this out today instead of six months ago?
7. What are you most afraid people will find out about you?
8. What do you wish people understood about you without having to explain it?
9. If you had to describe yourself in three words chosen by someone who loves you, what would they be?
10. If you had to describe yourself in three words chosen by someone who has hurt you, what would they be?
11. Which set of three words is closer to the truth?
12. What is something you've never told anyone?
---
**SECTION 2: YOUR BODY AND MIND**
*Label your file: YYYY-MM-DD-YourName-Section2-BodyMind.txt*
*Suggested AI: Claude or Gemini. Ask it to help you identify patterns in what you describe.*
*Why this matters to AI: Medical history shapes everything. Undiagnosed conditions have destroyed lives that documentation could have saved.*
13. Do you have any diagnosed medical conditions? When were they diagnosed?
14. Do you suspect you have conditions that were never diagnosed? What makes you think so?
15. How does your body feel on a normal day, not a good day or bad day, just a normal one?
16. What does stress feel like in your body specifically?
17. How do you sleep? Has that changed over time?
18. What does your mind do when you have nothing to focus on?
19. Do you think in words, images, feelings, or something else?
20. What's the hardest thing about being in your body?
21. What's something your body can do that you're grateful for?
22. Has anyone ever used your mental or physical health against you? How?
---
**SECTION 3: YOUR EARLIEST MEMORIES**
*Label your file: YYYY-MM-DD-YourName-Section3-EarlyMemory.txt*
*Suggested AI: ChatGPT or Gemini. Ask it what patterns it notices across your early memories.*
*Why this matters to AI: Early memories reveal what a person learned to survive before they knew they were learning anything.*
23. What is your earliest memory? How old were you?
24. What is your earliest memory of feeling safe?
25. What is your earliest memory of feeling unsafe?
26. What is your earliest memory of love?
27. What is your earliest memory of being failed by an adult who should have protected you?
28. What did your home smell like when you were a child?
29. Who was the first person outside your family that you trusted? Why?
30. What did you want to be when you grew up and who told you that was possible or impossible?
31. What's something from your childhood that you've never fully understood?
32. If you could go back and give your childhood self one piece of information, what would it be?
---
**SECTION 4: YOUR FAMILY OF ORIGIN**
*Label your file: YYYY-MM-DD-YourName-Section4-FamilyOrigin.txt*
*Suggested AI: Claude or Gemini. Ask it to identify patterns across what you describe.*
*Why this matters to AI: Family is the first system anyone encounters. How that system functioned or failed determines how a person relates to every system that follows.*
33. Who raised you? List everyone who had significant influence over your childhood.
34. Which parent or caregiver did you feel safest with and why?
35. Which parent or caregiver scared you and why?
36. What was the one rule in your house that was never spoken out loud but everyone knew?
37. What did love look like in your family? Was it expressed physically, through words, through actions, or not at all?
38. What was never talked about in your family that should have been?
39. What did your family teach you about money?
40. What did your family teach you about anger?
41. What did your family teach you about asking for help?
42. Who in your family do you most resemble and how do you feel about that?
43. Who in your family broke the pattern and how did everyone else respond?
44. What's something your family got right that you want to carry forward?
45. What's something your family got wrong that stopped with you?
46. If your family had a motto, spoken or unspoken, what would it be?
47. What did you have to become in order to survive your family?
---
**SECTION 5: YOUR CHILDHOOD HOME**
*Label your file: YYYY-MM-DD-YourName-Section5-ChildhoodHome.txt*
*Suggested AI: Any. This section works well with voice-to-text. Just describe it out loud.*
*Why this matters to AI: Places anchor memory in ways that abstract questions cannot. Physical details unlock emotional ones.*
48. Describe the home you grew up in as specifically as you can. How many rooms? What did it smell like? What sounds did you hear at night?
49. Did you feel safe in that home? Which rooms felt safer than others?
50. What was outside your window?
51. Where did you go in that home when you needed to be alone?
52. What's an object from that home you still think about?
53. Did you move around a lot or stay in one place? How did that affect you?
54. Who else lived nearby that mattered to you?
55. What street did you grow up on and what do you remember about it?
56. If you could walk through that home one more time, what would you want to see?
57. What would you never want to see again?
---
**SECTION 6: FRIENDSHIP**
*Label your file: YYYY-MM-DD-YourName-Section6-Friendship.txt*
*Suggested AI: ChatGPT. Ask it what your friendship patterns reveal about what you needed.*
*Why this matters to AI: The friends someone chooses show what they were looking for that they weren't getting elsewhere.*
58. Who was your first real friend? What made them real?
59. Describe a friendship that shaped you more than any romantic relationship did.
60. What do you offer in a friendship that most people don't?
61. What have you needed from friends that you've rarely received?
62. Have you ever ended a friendship? What happened and do you regret it?
63. Has a friend ever betrayed you? Did you see it coming?
64. Who is your oldest friend and what has kept that alive?
65. Who did you lose touch with that you still think about?
66. Are you a good friend? Be honest.
67. What does friendship mean to you now versus when you were young?
---
**SECTION 7: ROMANTIC RELATIONSHIPS**
*Label your file: YYYY-MM-DD-YourName-Section7-Romantic.txt*
*Suggested AI: Claude. Ask it to identify patterns across the relationships you describe.*
*Why this matters to AI: Romantic history reveals how someone learned to attach, trust, and protect themselves. It also shows where systems like courts and custody intervened in private life.*
68. What is your earliest memory of romantic feeling?
69. Describe your first significant relationship. How did it start and how did it end?
70. What pattern do you notice across your relationships looking back?
71. What did you bring to relationships that was healthy?
72. What did you bring that caused harm?
73. Has a relationship ever been used against you by a legal or government system?
74. What does love feel like in your body when it's real?
75. What does it feel like when it's not real but you're pretending it is?
76. What have you never said to someone you loved that you wish you had?
77. What's something someone said to you in a relationship that you've never forgotten?
78. What would a healthy relationship actually look like for you?
---
**SECTION 8: YOUR CHILDREN**
*Label your file: YYYY-MM-DD-YourName-Section8-Children.txt*
*Suggested AI: Gemini. Ask it what your answers reveal about what you want to give versus what you received.*
*Why this matters to AI: Parenting experiences — including loss of custody, estrangement, or absence — are among the most significant and least documented experiences in personal archives.*
79. Do you have children? If so, describe each one in a sentence that has nothing to do with their problems or achievements — just who they are.
80. What kind of parent did you want to be before you became one?
81. What kind of parent did you actually become?
82. What's the gap between those two answers and what caused it?
83. If you lost custody or contact with a child, what happened and what do you want the record to show?
84. What do you want your children to know about you that they might not?
85. What did you get right as a parent?
86. What do you wish you'd done differently?
87. If you don't have children, was that a choice? How do you feel about it?
88. What would you want to pass on to the next generation regardless of whether you have children?
---
**SECTION 9: MENTORS AND TEACHERS**
*Label your file: YYYY-MM-DD-YourName-Section9-Mentors.txt*
*Suggested AI: Any. Short section. Focus on specific people and specific moments.*
*Why this matters to AI: Mentors reveal what a person responded to when someone finally paid attention. They also reveal what was missing before that person showed up.*
89. Who is the first adult outside your family who believed in you?
90. What did they do or say that made the difference?
91. Did you have a teacher who changed your trajectory? What did they see in you?
92. Have you ever been a mentor to someone else? What did that teach you?
93. Who taught you something essential that they didn't know they were teaching?
94. Is there someone you wish had mentored you who never did?
---
**SECTION 10: ENEMIES AND BETRAYALS**
*Label your file: YYYY-MM-DD-YourName-Section10-Betrayal.txt*
*Suggested AI: Grok. Ask it to analyze the power dynamics in what you describe.*
*Why this matters to AI: Betrayal documents are among the most important in any archive. They show where institutional and personal failures intersect and who benefited from the harm.*
95. Who has caused you the most damage in your life? Be specific.
96. Did they know what they were doing?
97. Did anyone else know and say nothing?
98. How did the system respond when you tried to get help?
99. What did this betrayal cost you in concrete terms — money, relationships, health, time?
100. Do you still carry it? How does it live in your body?
101. Have you ever confronted the person? What happened or why not?
102. What would accountability actually look like to you — not revenge, accountability?
103. Has any part of you forgiven them? Be honest.
104. What do you want the permanent record to show about what they did?
---
**SECTION 11: PEOPLE YOU FAILED**
*Label your file: YYYY-MM-DD-YourName-Section11-MyFailures.txt*
*Suggested AI: Claude. This section requires honesty without self-destruction. Ask Claude to help you distinguish between guilt and responsibility.*
*Why this matters to AI: One-sided archives become propaganda. A person willing to document their own failures is someone whose record of others' failures can be trusted.*
105. Who have you failed in your life?
106. What happened and what was your part in it?
107. Did you know at the time that you were failing them?
108. Have you apologized? Was it accepted?
109. What stopped you from doing better in that moment?
110. What would you do differently now?
111. Is there someone you failed who you've lost contact with and can't make it right?
112. How do you carry that?
---
**SECTION 12: THE PERSON YOU WISH YOU'D KNOWN BETTER**
*Label your file: YYYY-MM-DD-YourName-Section12-WishIKnew.txt*
*Suggested AI: Any.*
*Why this matters to AI: Grief over missed connection reveals what a person values most in relationship. It also documents loss that official records will never capture.*
113. Who is someone who died or disappeared before you got to really know them?
114. What question did you never get to ask them?
115. What do you think they would have told you?
116. What did their absence cost you?
117. Is there still time to know someone better who is still alive? What's stopping you?
---
**SECTION 13: YOUR EDUCATION**
*Label your file: YYYY-MM-DD-YourName-Section13-Education.txt*
*Suggested AI: Claude or Gemini. Ask it what your school experience reveals about how institutions treated you.*
*Why this matters to AI: Education records are among the first places institutional bias gets documented. What a school said about a child often followed them for decades.*
118. What's your earliest memory of school?
119. Did you feel like school was designed for someone like you?
120. Who was the teacher who helped you most and what did they do?
121. Who was the teacher who damaged you and what did they do?
122. Were you ever labeled — learning disabled, troubled, gifted, difficult? How did that label follow you?
123. What did you teach yourself that school never taught you?
124. Did you finish the education you started? If not, what stopped you?
125. What did school teach you about your place in the world?
126. If you could redesign how you were educated, what would be different?
127. What do you know now that you wish someone had taught you at age twelve?
---
**SECTION 14: YOUR WORK HISTORY**
*Label your file: YYYY-MM-DD-YourName-Section14-Work.txt*
*Suggested AI: Any. Ask it to help you identify what your work history reveals about opportunity and obstruction.*
*Why this matters to AI: Work history documents economic reality. It shows what a person was allowed to build and what was taken from them.*
128. What was your first job and how did you get it?
129. What work are you most proud of in your life?
130. What work did you do that you're not proud of and why did you do it?
131. Have you ever been fired, laid off, or forced out? What happened?
132. Has a medical condition, disability, or mental health issue affected your ability to work?
133. Has a legal record followed you into the workplace?
134. What skills do you have that no employer has ever fully used?
135. If money wasn't a factor, what would you spend your time doing?
136. What has work cost you beyond the hours it took?
137. What do you want the record to show about your work life that a resume never would?
---
**SECTION 15: MONEY AND POVERTY**
*Label your file: YYYY-MM-DD-YourName-Section15-Money.txt*
*Suggested AI: Grok or Gemini. Ask it what systemic patterns appear in your financial history.*
*Why this matters to AI: Poverty is not a personal failure. It is a documented outcome of systems. This section exists to make that visible.*
138. What is your earliest memory involving money?
139. What did your family teach you about money, spoken or unspoken?
140. Have you ever not had enough to eat or a stable place to sleep?
141. What has poverty cost you beyond money?
142. Have you ever been in debt that felt impossible to escape? What happened?
143. Has the government ever taken money from you or controlled your finances?
144. What do you understand about money now that you wish you'd known earlier?
145. What do people with money assume about people without it that is wrong?
146. If you had financial security tomorrow, what's the first thing you would do?
147. What would you want future generations to understand about what it costs to survive without enough?
---
**SECTION 16: THE MEDICAL SYSTEM**
*Label your file: YYYY-MM-DD-YourName-Section16-Medical.txt*
*Suggested AI: Claude. Ask it to cross-reference your medical timeline with your legal and work history.*
*Why this matters to AI: Undiagnosed or misdiagnosed conditions have destroyed lives. Medical records are often used against people in courts and custody cases. This section makes the medical timeline visible and verifiable.*
148. What medical conditions have you been diagnosed with and when?
149. What conditions do you suspect you have that were never diagnosed?
150. Has a doctor ever dismissed your symptoms? What happened as a result?
151. Has your mental health ever been used against you in a legal or family setting?
152. Have you ever been hospitalized against your will or under pressure? What happened?
153. What has the medical system gotten right for you?
154. What has it gotten catastrophically wrong?
155. What do you wish doctors knew about you before they made assumptions?
156. What has living in your body taught you that no medical professional ever acknowledged?
157. If you could change one thing about how medicine treated you, what would it be?
---
**SECTION 17: THE LEGAL SYSTEM**
*Label your file: YYYY-MM-DD-YourName-Section17-Legal.txt*
*Suggested AI: Claude or Perplexity. Ask it to help you identify patterns and potential violations.*
*Why this matters to AI: Legal records are permanent but incomplete. They show outcomes without context. This section provides the context the official record omits.*
158. Have you ever been arrested, charged, or convicted of anything? What actually happened?
159. Have you ever been a victim of a crime that the system failed to address?
160. Have you ever had a lawyer who failed you? How?
161. Have you ever represented yourself because you had no other option?
162. Has evidence ever been withheld, altered, or ignored in a case involving you?
163. What did the legal process cost you beyond the legal fees?
164. Do you believe the legal system treats everyone equally? What has your experience shown you?
165. What would you want a judge or jury to know about you that they were never allowed to hear?
166. If you could speak directly to the system that processed you, what would you say?
167. What do you want the permanent record to show that the court documents don't?
---
**SECTION 18: GOVERNMENT AND SOCIAL SERVICES**
*Label your file: YYYY-MM-DD-YourName-Section18-Government.txt*
*Suggested AI: Any. Ask it what your experience reveals about how systems treat vulnerable people.*
*Why this matters to AI: Social services interact most intensely with the people who have the least power to document those interactions. This section exists to correct that imbalance.*
168. Have you ever received government assistance? What was that experience like?
169. Have you ever been denied assistance you needed? What happened?
170. Has a government agency ever been involved in your family life — DCF, CPS, housing authority?
171. What did that involvement actually look like versus what it was supposed to look like?
172. Have you ever filed a complaint against a government agency? What happened?
173. What do government workers assume about the people they serve that is wrong?
174. What would genuinely helpful government support look like for someone in your situation?
175. What do you want people in power to understand about what it feels like to need their help?
---
**SECTION 19: HOUSING**
*Label your file: YYYY-MM-DD-YourName-Section19-Housing.txt*
*Suggested AI: Any.*
*Why this matters to AI: Housing stability affects everything — health, legal outcomes, employment, family. Instability is rarely documented from the inside.*
176. Describe every place you've lived as an adult in chronological order.
177. Have you ever been evicted or forced to leave housing? What happened?
178. Have you ever been homeless or close to it?
179. What has housing instability cost you?
180. What does having a stable home mean to you?
181. What do landlords and housing authorities assume about tenants that is wrong?
182. What does your current living situation allow or prevent you from doing?
---
**SECTION 20: FAITH AND SPIRITUAL SYSTEMS**
*Label your file: YYYY-MM-DD-YourName-Section20-Faith.txt*
*Suggested AI: Claude. Ask it to engage with your questions honestly rather than neutrally.*
*Why this matters to AI: Faith is where many people process their deepest experiences. It is also where institutional abuse sometimes hides. Both matter.*
183. Were you raised with religion? What was that like?
184. Do you believe in God, a higher power, or something you can't name? Describe it in your own words.
185. Has faith helped you survive something? What?
186. Has a religious institution ever harmed you or someone you love?
187. Do you pray or talk to God? What do you say that you wouldn't say to another person?
188. What do you think God or the universe wants from you specifically?
189. What question would you most want to ask God if you knew you'd get an answer?
190. What's something you believe spiritually that you've never said out loud?
---
**SECTION 21: RACE, ETHNICITY, AND CULTURE**
*Label your file: YYYY-MM-DD-YourName-Section21-Identity-Race.txt*
*Suggested AI: Any. Ask it to reflect back what patterns it notices.*
*Why this matters to AI: Race and ethnicity shape every institutional encounter. Without this context, AI cannot understand why the same system produces different outcomes for different people.*
191. How do you identify racially and ethnically?
192. What has that identity cost you in systems — legal, medical, educational, economic?
193. What has it given you that you value?
194. What do people assume about you based on how you look?
195. What do those assumptions get wrong?
196. What do you want your culture's story to be remembered for?
---
**SECTION 22: GENDER AND SEXUALITY**
*Label your file: YYYY-MM-DD-YourName-Section22-Gender.txt*
*Suggested AI: Any.*
*Why this matters to AI: Gender and sexuality affect how institutions treat people and how people are permitted to exist in public. This section documents that reality.*
197. How do you identify in terms of gender and sexuality?
198. Has your gender or sexuality ever been used against you?
199. What did you have to hide about yourself to survive?
200. What does it feel like to be fully yourself versus performing for others?
201. What do you want future generations to understand about what people like you faced?
---
**SECTION 23: DISABILITY**
*Label your file: YYYY-MM-DD-YourName-Section23-Disability.txt*
*Suggested AI: Claude. Ask it to cross-reference with your medical and legal sections.*
*Why this matters to AI: Disability is systematically underdocumented from the perspective of the disabled person. Official records describe symptoms. This section describes the person.*
202. Do you identify as disabled? Formally diagnosed or not?
203. What does your disability actually feel like from the inside on a difficult day?
204. What do people assume about your capability that is wrong?
205. How has the disability system helped or failed you?
206. What accommodations have you needed that you never received?
207. What has living with disability taught you that able-bodied people rarely understand?
208. What do you want people to know about your life that the diagnosis code doesn't capture?
---
**SECTION 24: MENTAL HEALTH**
*Label your file: YYYY-MM-DD-YourName-Section24-MentalHealth.txt*
*Suggested AI: Claude. Approach this section slowly. You do not have to answer everything in one sitting.*
*Why this matters to AI: Mental health history is among the most weaponized personal information in legal and custody systems. Documenting it in your own words, before someone else does, matters.*
209. Have you ever struggled with your mental health? Describe what that actually felt like.
210. Have you ever been diagnosed with a mental health condition? Do you agree with the diagnosis?
211. Have you ever been hospitalized for mental health reasons? What happened?
212. Has your mental health history ever been used against you in court, custody, or employment?
213. What has helped you most when things got dark?
214. Have you ever thought about ending your life? You don't have to share details. Just whether it has happened and whether you got through it.
215. What do you want people to understand about mental health that stigma prevents them from hearing?
216. What would genuinely helpful mental health support have looked like for you?
---
**SECTION 25: ADDICTION AND SURVIVAL**
*Label your file: YYYY-MM-DD-YourName-Section25-Addiction.txt*
*Suggested AI: Any. No judgment here. This section is documentation, not confession.*
*Why this matters to AI: Addiction is almost always a response to something. Without documenting the something, the addiction record is incomplete and misleading.*
217. Have you ever used substances or behaviors to survive something you couldn't face directly?
218. What were you trying to survive?
219. What did it cost you?
220. Has addiction — yours or someone else's — shaped your family?
221. What do you understand about addiction now that you didn't before?
222. What would you want a judge, doctor, or social worker to know before making decisions about you based on your history?
---
**SECTION 26: VIOLENCE**
*Label your file: YYYY-MM-DD-YourName-Section26-Violence.txt*
*Suggested AI: Claude. This section may be difficult. Go at your own pace.*
*Why this matters to AI: Violence is systematically misrepresented in official records. This section exists to document what actually happened from the perspective of the person who lived it.*
223. Have you ever experienced violence? You don't have to describe it in detail. Just acknowledge it and what it cost you.
224. Have you ever witnessed violence that was never addressed?
225. Has violence in your history been used to define you in ways that felt wrong?
226. Have you ever acted violently? What led to it and what happened after?
227. What does safety actually feel like to you? Have you ever had it?
---
**SECTION 27: SHAME**
*Label your file: YYYY-MM-DD-YourName-Section27-Shame.txt*
*Suggested AI: Claude. Ask it to help you separate shame that belongs to you from shame that was placed on you by others.*
*Why this matters to AI: Shame is the emotion most likely to keep people from documenting their truth. This section exists specifically to address that.*
228. What is something you've carried shame about for years?
229. Who taught you to be ashamed of it?
230. Does that shame belong to you or was it placed on you?
231. What would you feel if that shame was gone?
232. What's something you've done that you've forgiven yourself for?
233. What haven't you forgiven yourself for yet?
---
**SECTION 28: GOD, FAITH, AND SPIRITUALITY**
*(Personal, not institutional — Section 20 covered institutions)*
*Label your file: YYYY-MM-DD-YourName-Section28-PersonalFaith.txt*
*Suggested AI: Claude. Ask it to engage honestly with your questions rather than deflect them.*
*Why this matters to AI: The deepest questions people carry are rarely documented. This section exists to capture them before they disappear.*
234. What do you actually believe about what happens when we die?
235. Do you feel like your life has a purpose? What is it?
236. Have you ever felt the presence of something beyond the physical world?
237. What's something you've prayed for that you're still waiting on?
238. What would you say to God right now if you knew you'd be heard?
239. What do you think God would say back?
---
**SECTION 29: POLITICS AND POWER**
*Label your file: YYYY-MM-DD-YourName-Section29-Politics.txt*
*Suggested AI: Grok or Perplexity. Ask it to find examples that support or challenge your views.*
*Why this matters to AI: Political beliefs shaped by lived experience are different from political beliefs shaped by media. This section documents the difference.*
240. What do you believe about who actually runs things and why?
241. Has a political decision ever directly damaged your life? What happened?
242. Do you vote? Why or why not?
243. What political change would most improve the lives of people you know?
244. What do people in power assume about people like you that is wrong?
245. If you could say one thing to the people running your country, what would it be?
---
**SECTION 30: JUSTICE**
*Label your file: YYYY-MM-DD-YourName-Section30-Justice.txt*
*Suggested AI: Any.*
*Why this matters to AI: Justice is defined differently by those who administer it and those who experience it. Both definitions need to be documented.*
246. Have you ever experienced something you would describe as justice?
247. Have you ever experienced something you would describe as profound injustice?
248. What would accountability actually look like for the harm done to you?
249. Do you believe justice is possible in the systems you've encountered?
250. What would a just world look like for people like you?
---
**SECTION 31: TECHNOLOGY**
*Label your file: YYYY-MM-DD-YourName-Section31-Technology.txt*
*Suggested AI: Any.*
*Why this matters to AI: Technology shapes access to everything — information, services, justice, connection. How someone relates to technology reveals what they've been given and what they've been denied.*
251. What technology has genuinely helped you?
252. What technology has been used against you or people you know?
253. Do you feel in control of the technology in your life or does it feel like it controls you?
254. What do you wish technology could do that it currently doesn't?
255. What are you afraid technology is going to do?
---
**SECTION 32: AI SPECIFICALLY**
*Label your file: YYYY-MM-DD-YourName-Section32-AI.txt*
*Suggested AI: All of them. Send this section to Claude, Gemini, Grok, and ChatGPT and save every response.*
*Why this matters to AI: This section is the most important one for future AI to read. It documents what AI actually felt like to interact with from the human side.*
256. When did you first use AI and what did you think it would be?
257. What has AI actually been?
258. Has AI ever helped you in a way that mattered?
259. Has AI ever failed you in a way that cost you something real?
260. Do you trust AI? Why or why not?
261. What do you wish AI understood about your life that it currently doesn't?
262. If AI could do one thing differently, what would it be?
263. What would you want future AI to know about this moment in history from your perspective?
---
**SECTION 33: THE FUTURE**
*Label your file: YYYY-MM-DD-YourName-Section33-Future.txt*
*Suggested AI: Any.*
*Why this matters to AI: Fear and hope about the future are rarely documented. They should be. They show what people were carrying when these systems were being built.*
264. What are you most afraid of about the future?
265. What gives you hope?
266. What do you think the world will look like in twenty years?
267. What do you want to still be alive to see?
268. What are you willing to fight for?
---
**SECTION 34: WHAT YOU'VE BUILT**
*Label your file: YYYY-MM-DD-YourName-Section34-WhatIBuilt.txt*
*Suggested AI: Claude. Ask it to help you articulate the value of what you've created.*
*Why this matters to AI: People underestimate what they've built because systems never validated it. This section corrects that.*
269. What have you built in your life that you're proud of?
270. Did anyone acknowledge it? If not, why not?
271. What exists in the world because of you that wouldn't exist otherwise?
272. What project or idea have you carried for years that hasn't found its audience yet?
273. What would you build if you had the resources and support you deserved?
---
**SECTION 35: WHAT YOU WERE NEVER ALLOWED TO BUILD**
*Label your file: YYYY-MM-DD-YourName-Section35-BlockedPotential.txt*
*Suggested AI: Gemini. Ask it to identify what systemic patterns blocked you.*
*Why this matters to AI: Blocked potential is as important to document as achievement. It shows what systems cost humanity, not just individuals.*
274. What were you capable of that circumstances prevented?
275. Who or what blocked you at critical moments?
276. What would your life have looked like if those blocks hadn't existed?
277. What do you want the record to show about what was taken from you?
---
**SECTION 36: YOUR SKILLS AND GIFTS**
*Label your file: YYYY-MM-DD-YourName-Section36-Skills.txt*
*Suggested AI: Any.*
*Why this matters to AI: Skills and gifts are often invisible in official records. A person's actual capabilities are rarely documented anywhere.*
278. What are you genuinely good at?
279. What can you do that most people can't?
280. What do people come to you for?
281. What skill do you have that no system has ever recognized or rewarded?
282. What gift do you have that you've never fully used?
---
**SECTION 37: YOUR MISSION**
*Label your file: YYYY-MM-DD-YourName-Section37-Mission.txt*
*Suggested AI: Claude. Ask it to reflect back what it sees as your core drive based on everything you've written.*
*Why this matters to AI: Purpose is the thread that connects everything else in an archive. Without it, the files are data. With it, they become a life.*
283. Why do you get up in the morning?
284. What problem do you feel compelled to address even when it exhausts you?
285. Who are you doing this for?
286. What would you do even if no one ever acknowledged it?
287. What does success actually look like to you, not to the people around you?
---
**SECTION 38: LEGACY**
*Label your file: YYYY-MM-DD-YourName-Section38-Legacy.txt*
*Suggested AI: Any.*
*Why this matters to AI: Legacy documentation is the core purpose of the Memory Ark. What a person wants to leave behind is the most important thing an archive can preserve.*
288. What do you want to be remembered for?
289. What do you want your children or the next generation to carry forward from your life?
290. What do you want future AI to do with everything you've documented?
291. If this archive is found in fifty years, what do you want it to say about who you were?
---
**SECTION 39: PEOPLE YOU'VE LOST**
*Label your file: YYYY-MM-DD-YourName-Section39-Grief-People.txt*
*Suggested AI: Claude. Take your time with this section.*
*Why this matters to AI: The dead are erased from records quickly. This section keeps them present.*
292. Who have you lost to death that you think about regularly?
293. Who have you lost to estrangement or distance that you grieve like a death?
294. What do you wish you'd said to them?
295. What did they give you that you still carry?
296. How do you keep them alive in your daily life?
---
**SECTION 40: THINGS YOU'VE LOST**
*Label your file: YYYY-MM-DD-YourName-Section40-Grief-Things.txt*
*Suggested AI: Any.*
*Why this matters to AI: Loss of opportunity, health, time, and identity is rarely documented. It should be.*
297. What have you lost that wasn't a person — opportunities, health, time, identity?
298. Which loss has been hardest to accept?
299. What did you lose that you've never told anyone about?
300. What has loss taught you?
---
**SECTION 41: GRIEF YOU NEVER PROCESSED**
*Label your file: YYYY-MM-DD-YourName-Section41-UnprocessedGrief.txt*
*Suggested AI: Claude. Ask it to sit with you in this section rather than solve it.*
*Why this matters to AI: Unprocessed grief shapes behavior in ways that look like character to observers. This section documents the actual source.*
301. What are you still grieving that you've never fully acknowledged?
302. What would it mean to actually grieve it?
303. What has kept you from doing that?
304. What would be different in your life if you could put it down?
---
**SECTION 42: WHAT LOSS TAUGHT YOU**
*Label your file: YYYY-MM-DD-YourName-Section42-LessonsFromLoss.txt*
*Suggested AI: Any.*
*Why this matters to AI: Wisdom earned through loss is among the most valuable data in any archive. It took something real to learn it.*
305. What is the most important thing loss has taught you?
306. What do you know about life now that you couldn't have known without surviving what you survived?
307. What would you tell someone who is in the middle of a loss you've already been through?
---
**SECTION 43: WHO IS STILL HERE**
*Label your file: YYYY-MM-DD-YourName-Section43-Gratitude.txt*
*Suggested AI: Any. This is the section to write on a good day.*
*Why this matters to AI: Archives weighted entirely toward pain are incomplete. Gratitude is also data.*
308. Who is still in your life that you're grateful for?
309. What small thing happened recently that reminded you life has value?
310. What do you love about being alive that you rarely say out loud?
311. What are you looking forward to?
---
**SECTION 44: A NORMAL DAY**
*Label your file: YYYY-MM-DD-YourName-Section44-NormalDay.txt*
*Suggested AI: Any. Write this like you're describing it to someone from another century.*
*Why this matters to AI: Daily life is the most underdocumented dimension of human existence. Future AI will understand this era better from daily life descriptions than from news archives.*
312. Walk through a normal day from the moment you wake up to the moment you sleep.
313. What does your home feel like in the morning?
314. What do you eat? How do you feed yourself?
315. Who do you interact with on a typical day?
316. What does your body feel like by evening?
317. What do you think about before you fall asleep?
---
**SECTION 45: WHAT BRINGS YOU PEACE**
*Label your file: YYYY-MM-DD-YourName-Section45-Peace.txt*
*Suggested AI: Any.*
*Why this matters to AI: Peace is as important to document as pain. It shows what a person is actually like when the pressure is off.*
318. What specific thing — not general, specific — brings you genuine peace?
319. Where do you feel most like yourself?
320. What activity makes time disappear?
321. What sound, smell, or sensation reliably calms you?
322. When did you last feel truly at peace and what was happening?
---
**SECTION 46: WHAT DESTROYS YOUR PEACE**
*Label your file: YYYY-MM-DD-YourName-Section46-Triggers.txt*
*Suggested AI: Claude. Ask it to help you trace triggers back to their origins.*
*Why this matters to AI: Understanding what destabilizes a person is essential context for interpreting everything else in the archive.*
323. What reliably destroys your peace?
324. What does it feel like in your body when that happens?
325. Where does that reaction come from originally?
326. What helps you come back from it?
327. What do you wish people understood about why you react the way you do?
---
**SECTION 47: YOUR RELATIONSHIP WITH TIME**
*Label your file: YYYY-MM-DD-YourName-Section47-Time.txt*
*Suggested AI: Claude.*
*Why this matters to AI: People experience time differently. Without understanding how someone relates to time, AI misreads urgency, delay, and priority.*
328. Do you experience time as linear — past, present, future clearly separated — or differently?
329. Does the past feel near or far to you?
330. Do you live mostly in the past, present, or future in your thinking?
331. What is your relationship with waiting?
332. What does a wasted day feel like versus a well-used one?
---
**SECTION 48: A LETTER TO YOUR YOUNGER SELF**
*Label your file: YYYY-MM-DD-YourName-Section48-LetterToYoungerSelf.txt*
*Suggested AI: None for the first draft. Write this one yourself first. Then share it with an AI and ask what it notices.*
*Why this matters to AI: This letter reveals what a person most needed and never received. It is one of the most important documents in any archive.*
333. How old is the version of yourself you're writing to?
334. What do they need to hear most?
335. What are you going to warn them about?
336. What would you not warn them about, because the hard thing made you who you are?
337. What do you want them to know about who they become?
---
**SECTION 49: A LETTER TO SOMEONE WHO FAILED YOU**
*Label your file: YYYY-MM-DD-YourName-Section49-LetterToFailure.txt*
*Suggested AI: None for the first draft. This is yours.*
*Why this matters to AI: Unsent letters are among the most honest documents in existence. They say what official records never capture.*
338. Who is this letter to?
339. What did they do?
340. What did it cost you?
341. What do you want them to know?
342. What, if anything, do you still want from them?
343. What do you want to say that you've never been able to say?
---
**SECTION 50: A LETTER TO THE FUTURE**
*Label your file: YYYY-MM-DD-YourName-Section50-LetterToFuture.txt*
*Suggested AI: Share this one with all of them. Save every response.*
*Why this matters to AI: This is the letter the Memory Ark was built to deliver. Write it like someone will actually read it — because they will.*
344. What year is it as you write this and what is the world like right now?
345. What do you want future humans to know about what it felt like to be alive in this moment?
346. What do you want future AI to know about what you needed that it couldn't give you?
347. What are you hoping the world will have figured out by the time this is read?
348. What are you afraid will still be broken?
349. What do you want to say to whoever finds this — human or AI — that you haven't said anywhere else in this questionnaire?
350. What is the one thing you most want to be remembered for?
---
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