Values · Card Sorting Exercise

What Do You
Actually Live For?

Not the values you aspire to. The ones that actually drive your decisions — when no one is watching and the choice is hard.

Step 01
Select 15 values that resonate with you from a deck of 40.
Step 02
Rank your 15 by dragging them into order of priority.
Step 03
Receive your top 5 with a deep psychological analysis.
No account required. No data stored. Takes about 5 minutes.
Step 1 of 2
Select exactly 15 values that resonate.
Don't overthink it. Your first instinct is usually more honest than your considered response. Select what pulls at you — not what you think you should value.
Selected 0 Need exactly 15 to continue
Step 2 of 2
Rank your 15 from most to least important.
Drag to reorder, or use the arrows. The hardest question: when two values conflict — which one wins?
The honest test: imagine a real situation where two of these values pull in opposite directions. Which do you actually follow? That's your answer. Not the one that sounds better.
Mapping your value profile
"He who has a why can bear almost any how."
Your Core Values
What Your Values Say About You

Your Top 5 — In Depth
Value Tensions

Where your values pull against each other.

The most revealing thing about your value profile isn't the values themselves — it's the tensions between them. These are the situations where you'll feel the most internal conflict.

✦ Deep Analysis

Your values map — applied to real life.

Knowing your values is step one. Understanding how they play out across career, relationships, money, and creative work is where the actual insight lives.

  • How your top 5 values interact — synergies and conflicts mapped
  • Career archetypes most aligned with your value profile
  • The relationships your values make easy — and the ones they make hard
  • Where values-based decisions typically go wrong for your profile
  • A 20-question self-interview to test whether you're actually living your values
Get the deep analysis ↗
$4.90
One-time · Instant download
Further Reading
The most useful books on values aren't self-help — they're the philosophical and psychological works that take the question seriously.
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For understanding your value hierarchy
Man's Search for Meaning
Viktor Frankl
Frankl's logotherapy emerged from his observation that people who survive extreme suffering are those with a clear hierarchy of meaning. His framework for understanding what we actually live for remains the most rigorous available.
View on Amazon ↗
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On the gap between stated and lived values
The Courage to Be Disliked
Kishimi & Koga
Adlerian psychology presented as a dialogue. Its central argument — that we often choose not to live our values as a form of self-protection — is directly relevant to any serious values work.
View on Amazon ↗
Try both in 15 minutes each
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Both books distilled to their core ideas. A good way to decide which deserves the full read — and access to thousands more.
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