Definition
Mindshui
noun · cognition & environment / psychological
Mindshui describes the arrangement of thoughts, attention, and mental objects to support clarity and ease of movement.
The term is formed as a cognitive analogue to feng shui, applying principles of flow and obstruction to internal mental space.
Mindshui focuses less on content and more on placement. Thoughts are not judged as good or bad, but assessed for whether they obstruct or support movement.
This orientation can reduce Signal Fat and interrupt Loopblind repetition by changing mental layout rather than argument.
Rating on the term
An individual rates high on Mindshui when:
- mental clutter is rearranged rather than suppressed
- attention moves without friction
- clarity improves through subtraction
Lower expression appears when thinking accumulates without spatial awareness.
Examples in use
“Adjusting the Mindshui changed everything without solving anything.”
“The insight wasn’t new. The Mindshui was.”
“Once the Mindshui cleared, action followed naturally.”
The room stayed the same. The layout didn’t.
Variants
mindshui practice (noun phrase)
mindshui adjustment (noun phrase)
Classification
Domain: Cognition & Environment
Archive: Departmental Linguistics – Qrious Vernacular
Defined by The Department of Qrious Threads.
