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Showing posts with the label teaching

You're Burnt Out, Not Broken: What Confucianism Knew About Getting Ahead of the Chaos

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  9 min read You've ticked every box. Good job. Nice flat. Decent salary. And yet, most Sunday evenings, there's that hollow feeling that something important is quietly slipping away. This post draws on the Confucian text Xueji and Stoic philosophy to give you four concrete, field-tested strategies for stopping modern burnout, distraction, and moral drift before they take hold . Most advice about productivity treats you as a machine that needs better inputs. More sleep. Better habits. A new app. But there's a different diagnosis on offer if you look at thinkers who lived through their own versions of hyper-stimulation and social collapse: the problem isn't your outputs. It's that you're always reacting, never pre-empting. That's the insight buried in a Chinese classical text most people haven't heard of. It's worth digging out. The Four Methods of the Xueji The  Xueji  (學記), or 'Record on Learning,' is a chapter in the  Liji  (Book of Rites),...

Stop Teaching Everyone the Same Way (A Confucian Idea That Still Works)

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  9 min read You’ve followed the system. You’ve done the courses, hit the milestones, checked the boxes. So why does your growth feel stuck, and your work feel hollow? This post unpacks a 2,000-year-old Confucian teaching on adaptive mentorship and learning, and shows why it might be the most practical antidote to modern burnout, imposter syndrome, and one-size-fits-all workplace culture. The Problem No One Names: Didactic Uniformity There’s a specific kind of exhaustion that comes not from working too hard, but from being forced into a mould that was never made for you. Call it  Didactic Uniformity : the assumption that the same method, the same curriculum, the same feedback template will work for everyone. It’s the standardised test that crushes the creative thinker. It’s the corporate onboarding deck that ignores how differently people actually learn.  It’s the manager who gives the same performance review script to the anxious introvert and the overconfident extrovert...

Stop Overcontrolling: What Confucianism Teaches Us About Leading Without Forcing

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  9 min read You're doing everything right, and somehow it still feels like you're dragging a rope uphill. The harder you push, the more resistance you get: from your team, your kids, yourself. This post draws on the  Xueji  chapter of the  Liji  (Book of Rites) and Stoic philosophy to show you how guiding without forcing produces better results in your work, your relationships, and your own head. The above image shows  a steep, rocky hill with a heavy rope being dragged uphill, symbolising struggle and resistance. Most of us were raised on a particular story about effort: push harder, do more, control the outcome. It's basically the operating system of modern professional life. Hustle culture has made force feel virtuous.  But burnout, micromanagement, and the peculiar loneliness of always being the most driven person in the room suggest something's gone wrong. Two ancient traditions, separated by thousands of miles, arrived at a surprisingly similar ...