Goals and ideals

Einismen does not want to make life easier to idealize, but clearer to live. The goal is a life with more direction, integrity and development.

Values and ideals A calm illustration with balanced stone forms suggesting value, priority and equilibrium.
What is pursued must also be possible to carry.

What one wants to achieve is not primarily outward success in the ordinary sense, but greater inner steadiness and better agreement between what one says, what one values and what one actually does. The human being should become less divided between ideal and action.

A good life in Einismen is therefore not the most comfortable life, but the life in which the human being lives more in line with their own clarified values. The ideals that guide it are courage, wisdom, self-discipline, authenticity and consequence.

The good life then becomes not a life without friction, but a life in which friction is met with greater clarity and better judgment. It is not the absence of resistance that makes life good, but the quality of how the human being meets that resistance.

The function of ideals in Einismen is not to serve as decorative words, but as points of orientation. When life becomes unclear, the ideals should help the human being choose direction. When life becomes comfortable, the ideals should remind them that direction matters more than self-satisfaction.