Hey there!!!

 

Okay, quick disclaimer: I’m not a Human Design expert (yet). But I am someone who loves tools that help me understand patterns, especially when they explain why certain things feel easy, hard, energizing, or downright exhausting.

These are the tools and prompts I’ve been using to better understand my Human Design, my birth chart, and myself. My energy. My decision-making. My relationships. My work.

This week I asked ChatGPT to analyze my Human Design and birth chart together and. . . yeah. It got real in the best way.

If you want to try it, here’s the simplest, least overwhelming way to do it.

 

Step 1: Get your Human Design chart (free)

This is the site I like best. It gives the clearest chart and explanations I’ve found:

👉 https://www.humandesignhypnotherapy.com/

What to do:

  • Scroll all the way down
  • Enter your birth info
  • She asks for your email (I’ve never been spammed)
  • You’ll get your chart

Heads up: the chart may confuse the crappola out of you at first. Totally normal. Don’t try to “understand” it yet.

There will also be a link to a free PDF report of your chart. Download it.

Step 2: Upload it into ChatGPT and use this prompt

This is where the magic happens.

Upload your chart (or the PDF) into ChatGPT and copy/paste this exact prompt:

I’m uploading my Human Design chart. Please explain it to me in clear, simple, real-life language.

Help me understand:
– how I’m designed to use my energy
– how I’m meant to make decisions
– where I’m naturally strong and where I tend to overextend or burn out
– how this shows up in work and career
– how it shows up in romantic relationships and friendships
– how it may influence me as a parent (or future parent)

Please also factor in my current age and life stage and explain what I’m most likely experiencing right now and why.

Keep this grounded and practical (not overly woo-woo), and focus on patterns, not predictions.

That’s it. No pressure to “believe” anything. Just notice what resonates and what makes you say, “Oh, that explains a lot.”

At minimum, it’s a fascinating lens. At best, it’s oddly validating.

Step 3: Ask follow-up questions (this is where it gets really helpful)

Once you’ve read the response, keep the conversation going. This is where things start to click.

You can ask things like:

  • What am I doing right now that is out of alignment with my design?
  • What would working with my design look like on a normal workday?
  • Where am I likely forcing or people-pleasing without realizing it?
  • What boundaries would support me most right now?
  • How can I support my nervous system based on my design?
  • What does “rest” actually look like for someone like me?
  • What themes tend to come up for people with my design at this stage of life?

You don’t need to ask all of these. Just start with the ones that feel right to you. 

I can’t wait to hear how this worked for you! 

xo - Wendy