You feel it. That low, persistent hum of misalignment — the feeling of checking every box (the degree, the job, the apartment) only to realize the boxes were never yours to begin with. You're moving. But are you arriving?
Most people try to find their values through a quiz or a personality test. They want a label to pin to their chest. But values aren't a destination you reach — they're the ground you walk on. They're the invisible threads running through your choices, your regrets, and your deepest longings.
To find them, you have to stop searching and start noticing.
Not a quiz. A practice.
The Art of Internal Listening
We usually treat journaling as a record of what happened. A log. But real journaling is excavation — clearing away the noise (the expectations, the comparisons, the inherited "shoulds") to find what's underneath. When you write honestly, you aren't just putting ink on paper. You're witnessing yourself.
At Veyn, we believe self-discovery isn't a one-time event. It's an ongoing conversation. It's why we built a living experience around the Ikigai framework — the intersection of what you love, what you're good at, what the world needs, and what sustains you.
But before you map the whole, you have to understand the parts. You have to identify your values.
30 Prompts to Surface Your Truth
These prompts are designed to peel back the layers. Don't rush. Let the answers breathe. The point isn't to finish — it's to notice what comes up.
Section 1 — The Echoes of the Past
Your values have already shown up. These prompts help you see where.
- When in your life have you felt most like yourself?What were you doing — and what does that reveal about what you value?
- Think of a decision you're deeply proud of.What guided that choice? What value were you protecting?
- Think of a decision you regret.Which personal value did you ignore or compromise?
- Name three people you deeply admire — real or fictional.What shared traits or principles do they embody that matter to you?
- If your younger self could see you now, what would they be proud of?What might disappoint them?
- Write about a time you felt truly respected and seen.What did the other person do? Which value of yours did they honor?
- Write about a time you felt invisible or dismissed.Which of your values felt trampled?
- Describe a time you stood up for something, even in a small way.What was at stake for you internally?
Section 2 — The Friction of the Present
Your values often reveal themselves through what makes you uncomfortable.
- When do you feel a strong sense of "this is wrong"?What value is being violated in those moments?
- When do you feel a strong sense of "this is right"?What value is being honored?
- Which habits or activities leave you energized?What values might they be feeding?
- Which habits or situations consistently drain you?Which values are being ignored?
- When you feel jealous, what does the other person have that you want?What value is hiding inside the envy?
- Which boundaries do you struggle to set or keep?Which values would those boundaries protect?
- What emotions show up when you go against your own values?Guilt? Numbness? Anxiety?
- What emotions show up when you honor them?Peace? Joy? Confidence?
Section 3 — The Pull of the Future
These prompts help you imagine a life aligned with your calling.
- What does success look like if you remove society's expectations?
- If you had one free year with all your needs covered, how would you spend it?
- What three qualities do you want people to associate with you?Why those?
- If you could magically change one thing about the world, what would it be?What does that reveal about what you care about?
- What kind of impact do you hope your life has on others?
- Describe your ideal ordinary day, morning to night.What does it reveal about your priorities?
- What do you want your life to stand for when you look back decades from now?
- Write a personal motto for your life right now.One guiding sentence — what is it?
Section 4 — Deep Integration
Bringing the abstract into the concrete.
- Which parts of your identity — culture, background, personality — are you most proud of?
- How do you want to show up in your closest relationships?What values shape that desire?
- What do you need more of, and less of, in your life right now to feel aligned?
- Pick one area — work, health, or creativity. What does a good life in that area feel like?
- What is one small action you can take this week to live your core values more fully?
- Looking back over these reflections, which five core values feel most alive right now?
The Companion on the Path
Identifying your values is the start. Keeping them in focus is the harder part.
This is where the Veyn app shifts from a tool to a companion. Most apps hand you a static list of "top values" and leave you there. But you aren't static. You're unfolding.
Veyn introduces you to Liv, an AI companion who does more than prompt you. Liv remembers. As you journal over days and months, Liv notices the patterns you might miss — that you mention "freedom" when writing about your career but "connection" when writing about your hobbies. She surfaces those threads. She checks in. Your self-discovery becomes a living practice, not a forgotten New Year's resolution.
From Values to Ikigai
Values are the North Star. Ikigai is the map.
When you work through the 30 prompts above, you're gathering raw material for your Veyn Map. As you reflect, the map fills in. It shows you where your values (what you love) meet your skills (what you're good at) and the world's needs. For anyone at a crossroads, that visual shift — from blurry to clear — is the whole point. It's the difference between guessing your way through life and walking with intention.
The answer to what you're here to do isn't in this post. It isn't in a textbook. It's already happening within you — in the unnamed feeling you get when something is right, and the sharp pang when something is out of place.
Stop running. Start listening.
The clarity you're looking for is already there. It's waiting for the stillness to find it.
Find what runs through you.