Chinese process orientation values practice and repetition as the path to mastery. Correct execution comes through repeated practice; skills become automatic through drill; competence develops through accumulated experience. This treats mastery as earned through sustained effort rather than quickly acquired.
In Chinese contexts, expect that becoming truly competent at processes requires extensive practice. What seems like excessive repetition is investment in automaticity—the ability to execute correctly even under stress. Shortcuts to mastery don’t exist; patient practice over time produces capability that rushed learning cannot achieve. Accept that mastery takes time and invest accordingly.
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