Human Design Prompts to Explain Your Chart
Use ChatGPT to decode your Human Design type, authority, centers and profile in plain language, and turn it into practical self-reflection and shareable content, all framed as a fun personal-growth lens rather than fact.
In short: This page contains 20 copy-paste ready prompts, organized into 4 categories with a description and pro tip for each. The first 15 prompts are free instantly โ no signup needed. Hand-curated and tested by the AI Academy team.
Understand Your Type
5 promptsExplain my type
1/20Explain the Human Design type [Manifestor/Generator/Manifesting Generator/Projector/Reflector] in plain language. Include: its core energy, strategy, a common strength, and a myth to drop. Warm and clear, about 150 words, entertainment only.
Breaks down a Human Design type's energy, strategy and strengths in plain terms.
Pro tip: If you don't know your type, generate your free chart on a Human Design site first, then paste the type here.
Type strategy in daily life
2/20Explain the strategy for a [type] (e.g. 'respond,' 'inform,' 'wait for invitation') with everyday examples. Include: what it looks like at work, in relationships, and one small practice. Practical and encouraging, about 140 words.
Translates a type's strategy into concrete daily-life examples.
Pro tip: Ask for examples from your own routine to make an abstract strategy feel usable this week.
Compare two types
3/20Compare the Human Design types [type one] and [type two]. Include: how their energy differs, how they best work together, and a possible friction. Balanced and fun, about 130 words, entertainment only.
Contrasts two Human Design types and how they interact.
Pro tip: Great for reflecting on a relationship; enter your type and a partner's or coworker's.
Type myths & truths
4/20Bust 3 common misconceptions about the [type] in Human Design and give a fuller picture. Include: the myth, why it's oversimplified, and the nuance. Honest and lighthearted, one short paragraph per myth.
Debunks three misconceptions about a Human Design type.
Pro tip: Framing it as myth-busting keeps the reading grounded and avoids treating the system as fixed fact.
Beginner's overview
5/20Give me a beginner-friendly overview of Human Design and the 5 types. Include: what the system is, a one-line description of each type, and how to find your own. Clear and welcoming, about 160 words, entertainment only.
Provides a welcoming intro to Human Design and its five types.
Pro tip: Use this to orient a friend before sharing their reading, so the concepts don't feel overwhelming.
Prompts get you started. Tutorials level you up.
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Chart Components
5 promptsExplain my authority
6/20Explain the Human Design authority '[authority, e.g. Emotional, Sacral, Splenic]' in plain language. Include: what it means for decision-making, a practical way to use it, and a common trap. Grounded and useful, about 140 words.
Explains a decision-making authority and how to apply it practically.
Pro tip: The authority is the most practically useful piece; ask for a real example of a recent decision.
Explain my profile
7/20Explain the Human Design profile [e.g. 1/3, 5/1, 6/2] in plain language. Include: the two numbers' themes, how they blend, a strength, and a growth edge. Insightful and warm, about 140 words, entertainment only.
Interprets a profile's two lines and how they combine.
Pro tip: Have ChatGPT explain each number separately first, then blend them, so the profile makes sense.
Defined vs open centers
8/20Explain what my defined centers [list] and open centers [list] suggest in Human Design. Include: what 'defined' vs 'open' means, a strength of my definition, and where I might absorb others' energy. Clear, about 150 words.
Clarifies defined versus open centers and what your configuration suggests.
Pro tip: Paste your defined and open centers straight from your chart for an accurate, personal explanation.
Explain a single center
9/20Explain the [center, e.g. Throat, Solar Plexus, Root] center in Human Design, both defined and open. Include: what it governs, defined vs open behavior, and a reflective note. Balanced and clear, about 130 words.
Details what one Human Design center governs when defined or open.
Pro tip: Focus on your most 'confusing' center; a deep dive on one beats a shallow sweep of all nine.
Not-self vs signature
10/20Explain my type's 'not-self theme' [e.g. frustration, bitterness] and 'signature' [e.g. satisfaction, success]. Include: what each feels like, how to notice them, and a gentle course-correct. Compassionate, about 130 words.
Explains a type's not-self theme and signature as self-awareness cues.
Pro tip: Use these as mood check-ins; noticing the not-self feeling is a fun nudge toward realignment.
Apply It
5 promptsDecision-making guide
11/20Using my authority [authority] and strategy [strategy], write a simple decision-making guide for a choice about [decision]. Include: steps to check in, questions to ask, and what to avoid. Practical and calm, about 150 words.
Builds a personalized decision-making guide from your authority and strategy.
Pro tip: Bring a real decision; applying the framework to something concrete is far more useful than theory.
Work & productivity fit
12/20Based on my type [type] and authority [authority], suggest how I work best. Include: ideal work rhythm, energy management, an environment that suits me, and one thing that drains me. Encouraging and practical, about 150 words.
Suggests a work style and energy approach based on your design.
Pro tip: Treat it as inspiration for experiments; test one suggestion for a week and keep what helps.
Relationships & communication
13/20Based on my type [type] and profile [profile], explain how I connect and communicate best. Include: my relational strengths, a need to voice, and a tip for a partner or friend. Warm and reflective, about 150 words.
Describes your relational strengths and communication needs by design.
Pro tip: Share the 'need to voice' with a partner as a conversation starter, not a demand or label.
Energy & self-care plan
14/20Based on my type [type] (e.g. Generator sacral energy, Projector focus), suggest a gentle energy and rest routine. Include: signs of burnout for my type, a rest ritual, and a reset. Kind and practical, about 140 words, not medical advice.
Outlines an energy-and-rest routine tuned to your type.
Pro tip: This is lifestyle inspiration, not medical advice; for real fatigue or health issues, see a professional.
Aligned daily rhythm
15/20Design a daily rhythm aligned with my type [type] and authority [authority]. Include: a morning check-in, a way to make decisions, an energy-honoring work block, and an evening reflection. Simple and repeatable, step by step.
Creates a simple daily rhythm aligned to your type and authority.
Pro tip: Keep it minimal; a routine you can actually follow beats an elaborate one you abandon.
Fun & Content
5 promptsType in one sentence
16/20Describe each of the 5 Human Design types in one punchy, relatable sentence. Include: the type name and a witty, affectionate one-liner. Clever and kind, under 20 words each, entertainment only.
Produces a punchy one-line description for each Human Design type.
Pro tip: Keep the lines affectionate; people share content that flatters their type, not roasts it harshly.
Types as [something]
17/20Write a 'Human Design types as [theme, e.g. coffee orders]' list. Include: each type, the matched item, and a one-line reason. Fun and shareable, under 15 words each, entertainment only.
Matches each Human Design type to a themed item in a shareable list.
Pro tip: Pick a theme your audience loves so the crossover feels fresh rather than formulaic.
Explainer carousel
18/20Write a 6-slide social carousel introducing Human Design to beginners. Include: a hook slide, what it is, the 5 types, strategy, authority, and a 'find your chart' CTA. Friendly and concise, 1-2 lines per slide.
Drafts a beginner carousel introducing Human Design across six slides.
Pro tip: Front-load the hook slide with a curiosity gap so people swipe through the whole carousel.
Type-specific pep talk
19/20Write an encouraging pep talk for a [type] who feels [struggle, e.g. stuck waiting]. Include: validation, a reframe using their strategy, and an uplifting reminder. Warm and motivating, about 100 words, entertainment only.
Writes a motivating, type-specific pep talk for a common struggle.
Pro tip: Name a real struggle in brackets so the pep talk feels personal instead of generic encouragement.
Human Design meme captions
20/20Write 5 funny, relatable meme captions about the [type] experience. Include: an exaggerated relatable moment and a hashtag. Playful and shareable, under 20 words each, entertainment only.
Generates five relatable meme captions about a type's everyday experience.
Pro tip: Relatable-but-specific beats broadly funny; niche moments get the most saves and shares.
Frequently Asked Questions
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