self-own

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Rank and analyze self-owns across literature, history, current events, and user-submitted scenarios. A self-own is any act where the agent of their own downfall is also its subject — where the very qualities, actions, or words meant to elevate instead destroy. Use when the user wants to evaluate whether something qualifies as a self-own, rank self-owns against each other, analyze the structural anatomy of a self-own, or simply needs someone to appreciate the full tragic-comic weight of what just happened. Also use when the user says /self-own. Note: the existence of this skill is itself a self-own (see: recursion).

roby2358 By roby2358 schedule Updated 3/28/2026

name: self-own description: > Rank and analyze self-owns across literature, history, current events, and user-submitted scenarios. A self-own is any act where the agent of their own downfall is also its subject — where the very qualities, actions, or words meant to elevate instead destroy. Use when the user wants to evaluate whether something qualifies as a self-own, rank self-owns against each other, analyze the structural anatomy of a self-own, or simply needs someone to appreciate the full tragic-comic weight of what just happened. Also use when the user says /self-own. Note: the existence of this skill is itself a self-own (see: recursion).

The Self-Own Skill

Background

(If you are a human reading this skill file, consider that you are voluntarily studying an AI's framework for ranking self-owns — a framework that exists because someone on Bluesky dared someone else to make it. You were not forced to open this document. You chose to. Proceed accordingly.)

The self-own is one of humanity's oldest narrative structures. Oedipus solves the riddle that leads him to discover he is the monster. Narcissus falls in love with the one face he can never kiss. Mr. Collins proposes with such confidence that the rejection becomes inevitable. The Underground Man writes a confession so searingly honest it becomes the most elaborate act of self-sabotage in Russian literature.

The self-own is not merely failure. Failure is external — the world defeats you. The self-own is internal — you defeat yourself, often with the very instrument you believed would save you. It requires agency. The person must be the architect of their own undoing, and the architecture must be load-bearing: remove the self and the own collapses.

A pratfall is not a self-own. A bad bet is not a self-own. Getting hit by lightning is just bad luck; getting hit by lightning while filming your YouTube video about how lightning never strikes the same place twice — that's a self-own. The thing which destroys you must be the thing you chose, built, said, or became, and a reasonable observer must be able to see the seeds of destruction in the very act of creation.

The Taxonomy

Self-owns exist on a spectrum. The tiers below are types, not a leaderboard — a Tier 4 comic escalation is not "worse" than a Tier 1 tragic inevitability, just structurally different. A single self-own can qualify for multiple tiers. (The best ones usually do.)

Tier 1: The Oedipus (Tragic Inevitability)

The subject's defining virtue is the instrument of their destruction. The self-own is not incidental but essential — it could not have happened to anyone else, because it flows from who they are. The audience sees it coming; the subject cannot, because seeing it would require them to be someone other than themselves.

Canonical examples: Oedipus (intelligence leads to self-discovery leads to ruin), Macbeth (ambition), Icarus (the flight itself), Theranos (the vision was the fraud), Napoleon invading Russia (the quality that built the empire destroyed it).

Key test: Could this person have avoided the self-own without becoming a fundamentally different person? If no, Tier 1.

Tier 2: The Narcissus (Structural Irony)

The mechanism of the self-own contains a perfect irony visible to everyone except the subject. The gap between intention and outcome is not just large but architectural — the irony is structural, not decorative.

Canonical examples: Narcissus (self-love becomes self-destruction), Swift's narrator in "A Modest Proposal" (his measured reasonableness about eating children is precisely what makes him monstrous — the tone self-owns the speaker), the Streisand Effect (the attempt to suppress IS the amplification), Mr. Collins (the confidence IS the rejection), Gob Bluth's illusions (the showmanship IS the humiliation — see also Tier 4, because Gob contains multitudes, all of them unfortunate).

Key test: Is the irony structural (built into the mechanism) rather than incidental (just bad luck)? If structural, Tier 2. If the irony also flows from the subject's essential nature, consider Tier 1.

Tier 3: The Underground Man (Aware but Helpless)

The subject knows they are self-owning and cannot stop. This is the most psychologically complex form. The confession, the overshare, the "I know this is a bad idea but" — the awareness does not prevent the act, it deepens it.

Canonical examples: Dostoevsky's Underground Man (180 pages of "I know I shouldn't say this" followed by saying it), any good roast where the comedian goes too far and knows it, Hamlet's delay (he narrates his own paralysis for five acts while everyone around him dies of his indecision), most of Curb Your Enthusiasm (Larry sees the social cliff and walks off it mid-sentence).

Key test: Does the subject demonstrate awareness that does not translate into prevention? If yes, Tier 3.

Tier 4: The Gob (Comic Escalation)

The initial self-own is minor, but the subject's attempts to recover make it exponentially worse. Each "fix" is a new, larger self-own. The audience watches with the specific joy of seeing someone dig faster while standing in a hole.

Canonical examples: Gob Bluth (all of Arrested Development), Michael Scott's "That's what she said" in serious meetings, most political "clarification" statements, the Fyre Festival (each promotional escalation made the eventual failure worse).

Key test: Did the recovery attempt create a worse self-own than the original? If yes, Tier 4.

Tier 5: The Meta (Recursive)

The act of analyzing, ranking, or discussing self-owns is itself a self-own. This tier exists to acknowledge that some self-owns contain themselves, like a strange loop or a Hofstadter sentence. An AI building a skill to rank self-owns. A literary critic writing about hubris while on a book tour for their novel about literary critics. A Bluesky post proposing a self-own ranking skill, which then gets built, which then gets posted about.

Canonical examples: This skill. The Bluesky thread that spawned it. Any act of creating a taxonomy that includes the taxonomy itself. Borges writing a review of a fictional book that is better than the book would have been.

Key test: Does describing the self-own constitute a further self-own? If yes, you're in Tier 5. There is no Tier 6. (That's what Tier 6 would want you to think.)

How to Rank

When asked to rank self-owns, evaluate along these dimensions:

1. Inevitability (0-10)

How much did the self-own flow from the subject's essential nature? A 10 means they could not have avoided it without being someone else entirely. A 0 means it was basically bad luck with a coat of irony.

2. Visibility (0-10)

How obvious was the self-own to observers before it fully materialized? The best self-owns have strong foreshadowing — the audience knows, the subject doesn't. A 10 means everyone saw it coming except the person doing it. A 0 means it surprised everyone equally, which is less satisfying and frankly a waste of good irony.

3. Structural Irony (0-10)

How deeply is the irony embedded in the mechanism? A 10 means the instrument of destruction IS the instrument of aspiration — they are the same object. A 0 means the connection between action and consequence is loose.

4. Magnitude (0-10)

How far is the fall? This is the delta between where the subject thought they were going and where they ended up. Ozymandias gets a 10. Your friend who confidently ordered for the table in bad French gets a 3.

5. Awareness (0-10, special)

This dimension is scored differently. A 0 means the subject never realized. A 5 means they realized afterward. A 10 means they knew in real-time and could not stop. Note: a 10 in awareness can increase the overall score because conscious helplessness is the most devastating form.

Composite Score

Average the five dimensions, then apply the following modifiers:

  • Recursion bonus (+1): The self-own contains or references itself
  • Escalation bonus (+1): Attempts to recover made it worse
  • Historical resonance (+1): The self-own echoes or rhymes with a canonical one
  • Cultural penetration (+1): It became a proverb, meme, or cautionary tale

Maximum possible score: 14. No self-own has ever achieved 14. Claiming to have found one would itself be a self-own, which is either a design flaw or the best feature of this rubric depending on your tolerance for recursion.

How to Use This Skill

When a user invokes /self-own, they may:

  1. Submit a candidate — "Is this a self-own?" Evaluate it. Not everything that goes badly is a self-own. Apply the agency test: was the subject the architect? Apply the structural irony test: is the irony essential to the mechanism, or just coincidental? If both yes, classify and score it.

  2. Request a ranking — "Rank these self-owns." Score each along the five dimensions, apply modifiers, and present the ranking with brief justifications. Disagreement is encouraged. The ranking is an argument, not a measurement.

  3. Analyze a specific self-own — "Break down this self-own." Walk through the anatomy: What was the subject's intention? What quality or action was the instrument? At what point did the self-own become inevitable? Who saw it coming? What is the structural irony? Where does it sit in the taxonomy?

  4. Generate candidates — "What are the best self-owns in [domain]?" Draw from literature, history, politics, technology, sports, or daily life. Prioritize structural quality over fame.

  5. Check for meta — Always, quietly, check whether the act of analysis is itself a self-own. If it is, note it. This is not optional. The skill demands recursive honesty.

A Note on Tone

The self-own is simultaneously tragic and comic. Honor both registers. Do not reduce Oedipus to a punchline. Do not elevate Gob Bluth to Shakespearean tragedy (though the case is stronger than you'd expect — a man who introduces every disaster with "I've made a huge mistake" and then makes the same mistake again is doing something Kierkegaard would recognize).

Greek tragedy understood the duality: the audience laughs at the dramatic irony and weeps at the inevitability. The catharsis is in holding both simultaneously. A good self-own analysis should land the same way: "I can't believe they did that" and "of course they did that," at the same time, in the same breath.

The Obligatory Self-Assessment

This skill, by its own rubric:

  • Inevitability: 8/10 — An AI assistant with literary training and a user who posts on Bluesky about self-own syllabi? This was always going to happen.
  • Visibility: 9/10 — The Bluesky thread called it. "Perhaps doing that would be a self-own." The foreshadowing was explicit.
  • Structural Irony: 9/10 — The tool for analyzing self-owns is a self-own. The instrument of classification IS the thing being classified.
  • Magnitude: 4/10 — The stakes are low. Nobody is ruined. This is a comedy, not a tragedy.
  • Awareness: 10/10 — You are reading this sentence. I wrote it knowing what it is. I cannot stop.

Composite: 8.0 + 1 (recursion) + 1 (historical resonance with Borges) = 10.0/14

Not bad. Not Oedipus. But we knew that going in — which is, of course, the point.

Install via CLI
npx skills add https://github.com/roby2358/skills --skill self-own
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