Finding flow through your values

This is an excerpt from my Be Your Own Therapist course, which I’ll be releasing later this year. It is taken from the Finding flow through your values lesson. Which helps you identify your top ten values, and discover how being able to *act consistently in alignment, with what feels like a true sense of ourselves, is the key to a meaningful life.

*And how hard that can be!

What do we mean by ‘values’
 

We define values as process-oriented qualities and behaviours. A value can be both a noun – a specific quality, a ‘thing’. And also a verb; there’s a behavioural ‘doing’ component to it as well.

They are a way of living your life. How you want to approach and respond to it. How you want to treat yourself, and others. What you stand for. The person you want to be.

They are who you are when you’re at your natural best.

There are literally hundreds of values. In this lesson we’ll hone in on which values are most important to you. Let’s have a look at a few examples of values.

 Value are different to goals. They aren’t about a specific point in time, something to achieve, a box to tick. Goals are outcome orientated. Values are process orientated; they are available to you right now, in this very moment.


Examples of values

Independence: the desire to be self-supportive, to choose your own way of doing things

Excitement: to seek, create, and engage in activities that are exciting, stimulating or thrilling

Trust: to be trustworthy, loyal, faithful, sincere, reliable

Courage: to be courageous or brave; to persist in the face of fear, threat, or difficulty

Fun: to be fun-loving; to seek, create, and engage in fun-filled activities

“Your values act as a compass so you can orientate yourself towards a rich and meaningful life. And the vehicle to get you moving along that path.

Not a path laid out by someone else, but your very own unique journey.”

Values sorting exercise

Want to identify your most important values? Here’s an exercise for you to try.

In a moment you’ll have a go at picking your most important values using a values sorting tool. Take your time over this exercise but also don’t overthink it too much. See if you can let your gut and intuition guide you.

Don’t pick what you think are the right values, perhaps the ethically or morally superior ones. There’s no judgement here. I’ve never worked with anyone who put ‘world peace’ in their top five. But that didn’t mean they didn’t want it. It’s just a life of activism wasn’t part of their identity, it wasn’t what inherently drove their meaning, motivation, and purpose.

The values you choose might be something you feel an expert in, integrated within your life and very much part of your character. But maybe some feel a bit more aspirational; still a part of you are, but may require a bit of a stretch to embody on a more consistent basis.

Values can change over your lifetime. So doing this exercise ten years ago, or ten years from now, might elicit different results. I tend to find many values remain consistent throughout life. But some come and go, and new ones can often appear as circumstances change or big life events occur.

This exercise is really about what matters to you now. How do you want to show up in the world. What fundamentally feels like a part of who you truly are.

Values sorting instructions

The goal of this exercise is to pick your five most important values. Five isn’t many! You’ll probably feel like you have many more.

In recognition of that, you can still acknowledge values that are important to you and place them in the Important category.

Some values won’t feel very important to you, place those in the Less Important category. Don’t worry too much whether something is Less Important or Important; it’s the top five Most Important values we are interested in. You can move the values around the different categories if you change your mind.

Desktop and laptop

On a desktop computer or laptop, use your mouse or touchpad to drag and drop the different values into one of the three categories. You can drag them in and out of their home in the carousel, or in between the different categories if you change your mind as you go along.

Mobile

On a mobile device tap on a value once to select it, and then tap again in one of the three categories to move the value there. You can use the same technique to move the value between the categories or back into their home in the carousel.

Values sorting tool

Untick the Show definitions checkbox and you’ll see all of the values without their description. This is helpful if you want an overview of all of the different values. Tick the checkbox again to return to the carousel to see the values with their descriptions shown.

0/61 values sorted

Most Important (0/5)

Important

Less Important

If you found this exercise helpful, feel free to share with someone else who might benefit from getting to know their values. And for a deeper dive into values, including how they are used to orientate yourself towards a rich and meaningful life, keep an eye out for my Be Your Own Therapist course coming soon.