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Values Clarification: What Matters More Than Anxiety?

Key Takeaways
  1. 1. Naming What You Care About Creates Space Anxiety Can't Fill

    • Anxiety narrows your focus to threats; values widen it back to what matters
    • A simple card-sorting exercise separates your real values from inherited ones
    • Choosing your own values, not your family's or culture's, is where the shift begins
  2. 2. The Gap Between Your Values and Your Life Shows You Where to Start

    • The bull's-eye exercise makes the distance between your values and actions visible
    • Research shows values-behavior gaps predict distress more than anxiety itself
    • The gap isn't a grade; it's a compass pointing toward where to focus first
  3. 3. One Small Step Toward What Matters Changes the Direction

    • Values without action stay abstract; one committed step makes them real
    • Choose something small enough that anxiety can't talk you out of it
    • Expect anxiety to show up alongside the action, not instead of it
References & Sources (12)

Every claim above is grounded in a primary source below, each one verified against academic citation databases and matched to what the study actually found.

  1. Hayes, S.C., Strosahl, K.D., & Wilson, K.G. (2012). Acceptance and Commitment Therapy: The Process and Practice of Mindful Change. Guilford Press.

    What we learned: Provided the foundational framework for values as freely chosen life directions and committed action as the behavioral bridge between values and lived experience.

  2. Creswell, J.D., Welch, W.T., Taylor, S.E., Sherman, D.K., Gruenewald, T.L., & Mann, T. (2005). Affirmation of Personal Values Buffers Neuroendocrine and Psychological Stress Responses. Psychological Science, 16(11), 846-851.

    What we learned: Demonstrated that writing about core values before a social stressor maintained baseline cortisol levels, establishing the physiological mechanism behind values-based self-affirmation.

  3. Sherman, D.K., & Cohen, G.L. (2006). The Psychology of Self-Defense: Self-Affirmation Theory. Advances in Experimental Social Psychology, 38, 183-242.

    What we learned: Provided the theoretical framework explaining why values reflection buffers against social evaluative threat by bolstering self-system integrity.

  4. Lundgren, T., Luoma, J.B., Dahl, J., Strosahl, K., & Melin, L. (2012). The Bull's-Eye Values Survey: A Psychometric Evaluation. Cognitive and Behavioral Practice, 19(4), 518-526.

    What we learned: Developed and validated the visual bull's-eye tool for measuring values-behavior discrepancy across four life domains, giving this article its central practical exercise.

  5. Michelson, S.E., Lee, J.K., Orsillo, S.M., & Roemer, L. (2011). The Role of Values-Consistent Behavior in Generalized Anxiety Disorder. Depression and Anxiety, 28(5), 358-366.

    What we learned: Showed that values-consistent behavior predicts wellbeing even when anxiety symptoms persist, supporting the article's core message that anxiety reduction isn't required for life improvement.

  6. Wilson, K.G., Sandoz, E.K., Kitchens, J., & Roberts, M. (2010). The Valued Living Questionnaire: Defining and Measuring Valued Action Within a Behavioral Framework. The Psychological Record, 60(2), 249-272.

    What we learned: Created the VLQ measuring both values importance and consistency of action across ten life domains, providing convergent evidence that values-behavior gaps predict distress.

  7. Arch, J.J., Eifert, G.H., Davies, C., Plumb Vilardaga, J.C., Rose, R.D., & Craske, M.G. (2012). Randomized Clinical Trial of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) Versus Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) for Mixed Anxiety Disorders. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 80(5), 750-765.

    What we learned: Demonstrated that ACT produced stronger quality-of-life and values-consistent living improvements than CBT for anxiety, supporting the emphasis on values-driven action over symptom reduction.

  8. Kashdan, T.B., & McKnight, P.E. (2013). Commitment to a Purpose in Life: An Antidote to the Suffering by Individuals With Social Anxiety Disorder. Emotion, 27(1), 78-84.

    What we learned: Found that commitment to a valued purpose moderated the relationship between social anxiety severity and life satisfaction, positioning values clarity as a protective factor.

  9. Kashdan, T.B., & Rottenberg, J. (2010). Psychological Flexibility as a Fundamental Aspect of Health. Clinical Psychology Review, 30(7), 865-878.

    What we learned: Established psychological flexibility as the mediating variable between values work and wellbeing outcomes, framing committed action as the behavioral foundation of flexibility.

  10. Gloster, A.T., Walder, N., Levin, M.E., Twohig, M.P., & Karekla, M. (2020). The Empirical Status of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy: A Review of Meta-Analyses. Journal of Contextual Behavioral Science, 18, 181-192.

    What we learned: Reviewed nine meta-analyses confirming medium-to-large ACT effect sizes for anxiety conditions (Hedges' g 0.57-0.97), providing the meta-analytic evidence base for values-based intervention.

  11. Sheldon, K.M., & Elliot, A.J. (1999). Goal Striving, Need Satisfaction, and Longitudinal Well-Being: The Self-Concordance Model. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 76(3), 482-497.

    What we learned: Distinguished self-concordant from introjected motivation, explaining why the card sort's forced-choice design helps people separate genuinely held values from absorbed expectations.

  12. Trompetter, H.R., Ten Klooster, P.M., Schreurs, K.M.G., Fledderus, M., Westerhof, G.J., & Bohlmeijer, E.T. (2013). Measuring Values and Committed Action With the Engaged Living Scale (ELS): Psychometric Evaluation in a Nonclinical and Chronic Pain Sample. Psychological Assessment, 25(4), 1235-1246.

    What we learned: Provided convergent validity for values-behavior measurement through the Engaged Living Scale, supporting the finding that values-behavior gaps predict distress across populations.

Naming What You Care About Creates Space Anxiety Can't Fill

Anxiety is a spotlight operator with one setting: threat. It aims your attention at what could go wrong, who might judge you, what you might lose. Over time, everything outside that beam fades. You stop noticing what you actually care about because you're so busy managing what you're afraid of. Values clarification is the practice of widening that beam back out. Research on self-affirmation shows that when people spend even a few minutes reflecting on what they genuinely value, their cortisol response to social stress drops measurably.

Here's how to try it. Write down 30 to 40 values on individual cards or slips of paper. Use a list if you want a starting point: connection, adventure, creativity, loyalty, learning, humor, kindness, independence, family, honesty, health, contribution. Sort the cards into three piles: Very Important to Me, Somewhat Important, and Not Important. Then go back to the Very Important pile and narrow it to five. This part is harder than it sounds, because it forces you to choose between good things. That discomfort is the point. You aren't ranking what's objectively valuable. You're discovering what pulls you forward.

Pay attention to which cards felt like obligation versus genuine pull. "Achievement" might land in Very Important because your parents valued it, not because it moves you. "Playfulness" might land in Not Important because you've told yourself serious people don't prioritize fun. The cards that surprise you are often the most honest. Values aren't what you think you should care about. They're what you'd walk toward if nobody were watching and nothing were at stake. That distinction is where the real courage lives.

The Gap Between Your Values and Your Life Shows You Where to Start

Knowing your values is one thing. Seeing how far your daily life has drifted from them is another. The bull's-eye values survey, developed by Lundgren and colleagues, gives you a visual way to measure that gap across four areas of life. It isn't designed to make you feel bad. It's designed to show you, specifically and concretely, where your avoidance patterns have been quietly steering.

Draw a target with four quadrants, each labeled: Work and Education, Leisure, Relationships, Personal Growth and Health. In each quadrant, write a short phrase about what matters most to you in that area. Under Relationships, you might write "being present and honest with the people I love." Under Leisure, "spending time outdoors and creating things." Then mark where your current behavior actually falls. An X in the bull's-eye means you're living close to that value. The middle ring means somewhat. The outer ring means you're far from it. Don't overthink the placement. Your gut reaction is usually the accurate one.

What most people find is a pattern. The quadrants where anxiety runs loudest tend to have the largest gaps. You value deep friendships, but you've been declining invitations for months. You care about meaningful work, but you stay quiet in meetings to avoid attention. These gaps aren't failures. They're the footprints of avoidance, visible now in a way they weren't before. Pick one quadrant with a large gap. That's where your next small brave step lives.

One Small Step Toward What Matters Changes the Direction

Values on paper are a nice start, but they don't change anything until they touch your actual life. In Acceptance and Commitment Therapy, this is called committed action: choosing one behavior that moves toward a value, and doing it, even when discomfort shows up. The research here is clear. A randomized trial comparing ACT and CBT for anxiety found that ACT produced stronger improvements in quality of life and values-consistent living. The people who got better weren't necessarily less anxious. They were doing more of what mattered despite the anxiety.

Here's the practice. Look at the value you identified in Section 1 or the quadrant from Section 2 with the biggest gap. Now ask: what's one tiny thing I could do in the next 24 hours that moves me a half-step closer? If you value connection, that might be texting a friend you've been avoiding. If you value learning, it might be signing up for one class you've been thinking about. If you value honesty, it could be saying what you actually think in one conversation today. The step should feel slightly uncomfortable but completely doable. Not heroic. Just honest.

When you take that step, notice what happens inside you. Anxiety will probably come along for the ride. That's not a sign you're doing it wrong. It's a sign you're doing something that matters. The old pattern was: feel anxiety, retreat, feel temporary relief, then feel hollow because you're still not living the life you want. The new pattern is: feel anxiety, step forward anyway, feel both the discomfort and something else, something warmer. That something else is what it feels like to walk in your own direction. Not away from fear. Toward what you chose.

This is educational content, not medical advice. It is not a substitute for care from a qualified professional.

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