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Value adding...
How do I work out what my values are? We are not encouraged to think too much
about our values. It is easy for an employer to want us to just get on with the
job- that’s their values. Working life is often busy and hard enough
that we seem to use all our energy just keeping up from day to day. Add a
relationship and kids, and who has time to reflect on values? "Many of our
concerns are a cause of worry and anxiety. Each concern tends to become
tyrannical and wants our whole heart, our whole mind and our whole strength.
Each concern tries to become our god. The concern about work becomes a god for
some, as does the concern for pleasure for others."
Charles L Birch, A Purpose for Everything
Chapter I
Values do not cease to exist just because we are not thinking much
about them. If we ask ourselves what is really important to us, and what we
really care about, we will have an answer. It may take a little while to get our
minds into gear, but we all have a list of ideas about the things that really
should be happening in the world, and what we would like to be doing.
My sense is that a fair amount of our dissatisfaction about life comes because
we have drifted away from the things which are really important to us. I don't
mean the things we feel we should say are important but the things that
really do matter to us. The things we would talk about after two or
three worry free nights round a camp fire. I think our values inevitably drift
towards the things we actually do, but our aspirational values, the
things we would really like to do, and which are truly important to us, do not
give up the fight for our life easily, as it were. The tension between what we
really want, and what we are doing, makes us unhappy, or sick, or worse. Indeed,
the reason we sometimes end up wondering ‘how we got here,’ and scarcely
recognising who we are, is because we have been so busy, we have not realised
how far we have moved from where we were, and how much we have lived as a
different person, with different values. Charles Birch says, "As the chasm
between our inner intentions and outer acts, our pretensions and our practice,
deepens, so does our hunger for wholeness."
Charles L Birch, A Purpose for Everything It hurts.
How do I get in touch with my values? How do I find what is really important to
me, and what I really care about? What do I really think should be happening in
the world? And given that what I think is unlikely to influence too many people,
is it even worth the effort?
I think it is. Knowing our valves, and trying to live by them, introduces a
certain balance in our lives. Even if we cannot achieve all that we wish, we
will at least be living our life moving towards some inner harmony, rather than
being defined by the wishes (i.e. the values) of others.
To begin is very simple. We only need to ask ourselves, "What is really
important to me, and what do I really care about? What do I really think should
be happening in the world?"
The trick is to do this in a way that lets us hear our "inner self." It does not
work well to sit down and work on our values, if we have the values of Coca
Cola and Hungry Jacks blaring in the background. Without being
melodramatic, we need to remember that the big companies of our day are trying
to convert us to their values; specifically that one which says we will be
happy if we buy their stuff. The key value of most of what we see around us
and hear on TV and radio is that happiness, meaning, and satisfaction come from
acquiring and consuming. We need to make space and quiet to think about what
really matters for us, and to decide for ourselves whether we want to buy into
the consumerism around us, or live another way.
It's also important to give the process time. If we've not had time to think
about what's really important, because the last two years have been frantic,
then we will not produce a ten page thesis on our core values in five short
minutes. We need, usually, to revisit the questions over time, distilling and
refining, reconsidering and testing.
Questions to ask in this distilling process, might include some of those below:
What do I spend my time doing- especially my free time? Does this say something about what's really important to me?
How much of what I do is just to block out the pain?
What do I worry about? Does this say anything about my values?
What am I ashamed of about myself? Why? What does this say about my values?
Who do I really admire and look up to? Why is this? What would I change about the way I do things if I was working with that person?
What are the things work asks me to do which I feel uncomfortable about? What does this say about my values?
There is a kind of
balancing trick to do with these questions. It is important to get
in touch with our feelings; they reveal much about our values. But
we should not simply equate our feelings with our values. It is not
that simple.
Is our reaction, our feeling, because we truly believe in a thing,
or because we are feeling guilty, for example? Are we reacting to
something our father always said, rather than something that is
important to us? Sometimes our reaction to old parental values
indicates we must move on. They were wrong- (for us, at least.)
Other times we need to deal with our irritation and hurts about
them, before we discover we can claim a particular value for
ourselves, as our own.
There is a moral dimension to our values. Some aspirations are
simply unworthy of our time, if not downright bad. But the beginning
of the process, is to avoid pre-judging our values as we are
rediscovering them. The important thing is to find out what we think
and feel, and why. That kind of honesty is much more revealing than
saying what we think we should say, or not owning up to deep
desires, because we think they are wrong. It is important to begin
by seeing just who we are. Even what, at first sight, we feel are
unworthy longings, may reveal much deeper valves which are like
gold. The conflicting voices within us are actually alerting us to
our life issues, and our real values. Listen, don't just do what
someone else said is the right thing. Don’t discount the feelings.
So here is the beginning: what really matters to us once we have
shut out all the noise around us? What do we find we feel? What do
we struggle with?