What is the Secret to a Meaningful Life?
Geoff McDonald
I help Speakers, Authors and Thought Leaders create their BIG idea.
Is it money or happiness? Or something else?
Today, we’re exploring Core Values. After reading this you’ll know: What they are Why you need them And how to use them to live a meaningful life.
(This applies to your personal life, your career and managing your organisation)
Over the past 25 years, I’ve spent thousands of dollars doing dozens of courses, read hundreds of books, worked with paying clients and personal experiments to find out how to live a meaningful life.
From all of this, I’ve concluded that living true to your values is the simplest and most powerful way to do this.
What are Core Values?
How do you choose the perfect partner? Do you prefer brains, beauty or being funny?
How do you choose the perfect job or career? Is it the pay, the people or the tasks you perform
How do you choose what videos or TV shows to watch? Do you go for education, entertainment or the extraordinary?
Your values are the level of importance you place on something. And they become the criteria you use to make decisions - the big decisions like finding the perfect partner and the everyday ones like choosing what clothes to wear.
Other words or synonyms for values include: worth, principles, ethics, morals, standards, criteria
Why do You Need Core Values?
What’s for dinner? And how do you choose what food to eat?
Abraham Lincoln once said, ‘When I do good, I feel good. When I do bad, I feel bad.’
When you value good health and you choose a salad for dinner, you feel good about your choice and about yourself.
But, if you value good health and you choose a burger, then you may feel good while you’re eating it. But, the next morning you might feel bad in the tummy, bad about your choice and bad about yourself.
Your values help you make decisions. And as Lincoln suggested, the more good decisions you make the better you’ll feel about yourself.
How do You Use Core Values to Live a Meaningful Life?
On YouTube, Mark Rober spent months planning and a full week building a pool full of Jello? Why did he do that?
NASA spent billions of dollars and a decade of effort to put a man on the moon. Why did they do that?
Athletes train for ten years to compete at the Olympics even though they know they might fail. Why do they do that?
We take on mighty things because they are important to us. And that’s because they express our values. The effort makes us feel good because it is meaningful.
And it’s meaningful because it reflects our values - the things that we say are important to us. Can you see the way they reinforce each other?
To live a meaningful life, you don’t need to aspire to grand plans. You can. But you don’t have to.
What you do need to do is take actions about things and in ways that satisfy you.
Do you use values to guide your decisions?
#values #manifesto #ideasarchitect
Enlightened Capitalism Evangelist | Consultancy Scaling Expert | Fractional CMO/CEO to $5M+ Service Cos. | Re-Align Your Personal Brand with Your Purpose & Genius | Growth Advisor | Metaphysician | Podcast Host | Speaker
1 天前I love how your exploration connects curiosity with action. One thing that stands out in my experience is how meaning evolves—what felt purposeful at one stage might shift later.?
Coaching with you in Mind.
1 周Geoff. Thanks so much for sharing this important article on values. For me, my values are my compass that inform the direction I head, the choices / actions I take and let me know when I am lost and help me find my way out. Unlike my GPS on my iPhone, my values compass doesn't need a charged battery. Although I do need to take my values compass with me when I head out into the world.
HR Consultant and Executive Coach
1 周Knowing our Core Values is vital to making beneficial decisions that support living a meaningful life. An important post Geoff.
Transformational Coach: Possibilities, Inclusion & Leadership | Author | Behavioural change Consultant | Expert in moving past #ImposterSyndrome | Living and working in Cammeraygal country
1 周Thanks @Geoff. For me, Core Values are a terrific guide to a life well lived ... second only to Purpose. For me, Purpose is the big why: the reason for the work I do, the big picture choices I make (in my work). My core values are what's important to me to make that Purpose happen. There are so many ways to describe our deep human need to live a life that matters. ??
Build an Outstanding Leader Experience and Legacy | Succession Ready | Leadership, Culture & Performance Focused | Highly Engaged Teams | LeaderToolkit | AI Adoption | Sustaining People - Planet - Profit | Challenger |
1 周“Taking on mighty things because they are important to us”. What are those “mighty things” for you Geoff?