邪修 (xiexiu) originated in Chinese cultivation novels as the path of the "heretical cultivator" - one who rejects orthodox methods in favor of unconventional, often forbidden techniques that deliver results faster. The internet adopted this term to describe a mindset: solving problems by questioning assumptions, ignoring conventional wisdom, and finding absurdly efficient paths to outcomes.
This skill teaches xiexiu as a methodology, not a collection of tricks. You will learn how to develop xiexiu thinking - the ability to generate your own unconventional solutions to any problem.
Xiexiu thinking is a meta-skill: the ability to find shortcuts in any domain. It is not about knowing specific hacks. It is about developing the mental patterns that generate hacks.
Core Principles:
A 5-step methodology for approaching any problem:
Before you can break rules, you must know what rules exist.
Example: Learning a language conventionally means classes, grammar drills, and years of study. Assumptions: you need structured curriculum, grammar foundation first, native-like proficiency is the goal.
Strip away ceremony to find what you actually need.
Example: Real goal might be "order food and ask directions in Tokyo next month" not "become fluent in Japanese."
Generate heretical ideas deliberately.
Example: Instead of studying grammar, memorize 50 phrases phonetically. Use a translation app and point at pictures. Hire a local student to be your guide.
Try unconventional solutions in low-stakes environments.
Example: Spend one day using only memorized phrases. Did you communicate? Did locals understand? Did you feel confident?
Improve your shortcut based on real-world feedback.
Example: If phrase memorization worked for ordering but not for directions, add 20 direction-specific phrases. Drop grammar study entirely.
The xiexiu framework applies to any domain. Here is how to approach different areas:
Cooking: Question why recipes require specific techniques. What is the actual goal - flavor, texture, nutrition, presentation? Test shortcuts that achieve the same sensory outcome with less effort.
Fitness: Challenge the assumption that workouts must be long, painful, or gym-based. What physical outcome do you need? Test micro-movements, habit stacking, and environmental changes.
Learning: Reject the curriculum. What specific capability do you need? Test immersion, roleplay, just-in-time learning, and skill substitution.
Career: Question credential requirements. What value do you need to demonstrate? Test portfolio projects, direct outreach, and alternative proof of capability.
Productivity: Challenge the optimization trap. What actual output matters? Test elimination, automation, and radical simplification.
Xiexiu thinking draws on several established mental models:
First Principles Thinking - Break problems down to fundamental truths and build up from there, ignoring inherited assumptions.
Lateral Thinking - Approach problems from unexpected angles rather than logical progression.
Inversion - Instead of asking how to succeed, ask how to guarantee failure. Then avoid those things.
Occam's Razor - The simplest solution is usually correct. Complexity often indicates unnecessary ceremony.
Pareto Principle - 80% of results come from 20% of effort. Find that 20%.
Second-Order Thinking - Consider the consequences of the consequences. A shortcut that creates more work is not a shortcut.
See references/mental-models.md for detailed exploration.
Use xiexiu when:
Avoid xiexiu when:
Deepen your xiexiu practice:
When helping someone develop xiexiu thinking:
Xiexiu is not a tool you pick up for specific problems. It is a lens for viewing the world.
The goal is not to cut corners on everything. It is to know that corners can be cut, and to choose consciously when to take the shortcut and when to take the long way.
Remember: The master xiexiu practitioner does not carry a bag of tricks. They carry a way of seeing.
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