Examples
Einismen becomes clearest when it is used in real situations. That is why concrete examples matter.
If a habit no longer works, it should not be defended only because it is old. It should be examined: does it still serve its purpose, or does it live only on habit and prestige?
If a promise cannot be kept, this should be said openly and the consequences should be carried. Einismen prefers acknowledged failure to hidden betrayal, because direction and trust otherwise break apart.
If a system becomes inefficient, it should be tested against better alternatives. That does not mean that everything old should be thrown away, but that everything must be able to justify itself. What works may remain, but it should remain for the right reasons.
If a human being loses direction, they should not ask only what feels best right now, but which next step actually carries their values. If a conflict arises, they should not first ask how to look strong, but which stance is clear, honorable and sustainable in the long term.
In that way the philosophy influences decisions by moving focus from impulse and habit to direction, function and consequence.