What do you stand for? Where are you heading? What matters most to you?
A compass doesn’t just help you know where you are—it points you toward where you’re going. Your values are your true north. They’re the principles that guide your decisions, shape your priorities, and define what kind of life—and what kind of relationship—you want to build.
Before you can navigate a relationship well, you need to understand your own direction.
You need to know: What do I value most? What am I willing to compromise—and what am I not? Where am I heading? What kind of life do I want to build?
Most people don’t clarify their values until something forces them to. A painful breakup. A major life transition. A moment when they realize they’ve been living by someone else’s script instead of their own.
But you don’t have to wait for crisis to create clarity.
How this module can help you:
Not all questions will apply to you right now—and that’s okay. Take what’s useful and leave the rest.
There’s an old proverb told in many cultures around the world:
“If you don’t know where you’re going, any road will take you there.”
Two travelers set out on a journey. One knew exactly where he was headed—he had a destination, a map, and a clear sense of direction. The other simply started walking, hoping the path would reveal itself.
The first traveler faced hard choices along the way—roads that looked easier but led in the wrong direction. He had to say no to shortcuts that didn’t align with where he wanted to go.
The second traveler never had to make those hard choices. He could take any path. But years later, when someone asked him, “Did you arrive where you wanted to go?” he realized he had never decided where that was.
Your values are your destination. They tell you which roads to take—and which to walk away from, even when they look appealing.
Without them, any relationship will do. With them, you can choose with clarity.
A realistic snapshot of your self-awareness and readiness
Are you currently:
Create a free account to save your reflections! Log in here
You’re welcome to move through these questions in whatever way feels right for you. You can study the sections from start to finish, or focus your efforts based on your self-assessment results. You can save your answers in the textboxes provided on this page, write your answers in a personal journal, reflect on them privately, or—if you’re working through this module with someone you’re dating or committed to—answer them individually and then discuss your insights together. There’s no right or wrong way to approach this. Choose the path that helps you grow.
Your Core Identity:
Your Story & Journey:
💡 Key Insight: “Authentic relationships don’t require perfection—they require self-awareness. The more you understand your own patterns, needs, and values, the more honestly you can show up, communicate clearly, and choose a partner who truly fits the life you want to build.”
Your personality is your natural way of being in the world—how you think, feel, interact, and recharge.
Some people are naturally outgoing and energized by people. Others are more reserved and need solitude to recharge.
Some people are spontaneous and flexible. Others prefer structure and planning.
Some people are deeply emotional. Others are more analytical and logical.
None of these are wrong—but understanding your personality helps you choose compatible partners and environments where you can thrive.
How You’re Wired:
Consider taking a personality assessment to deepen your self-understanding:
After taking an assessment:
💡 Key Truth: “Understanding your personality isn’t about labeling yourself—it’s about recognizing how you’re naturally wired so you can choose relationships and environments where you can thrive and be yourself.”
It’s easy to focus on what’s wrong—your weaknesses, your failures, your struggles.
But relationships thrive when both people know their strengths and bring them generously.
What do you uniquely bring to a relationship? What gifts do you offer? What value do you add?
This isn’t arrogance—it’s healthy self-awareness.
What You Bring:
💡 Key Insight: “Healthy relationships aren’t about two broken people fixing each other—but you also don’t need to wait until you’re ‘complete’ before entering one. Research shows that healthy partnership helps imperfect people flourish more together than they would alone. The key is self-awareness: understanding yourself well enough to grow together intentionally, bringing your strengths while honestly acknowledging your growing edges. Partnership itself becomes part of how we thrive.”
A blind spot is something you can’t see about yourself—but everyone else can.
Maybe you think you’re a great listener, but others feel unheard. Maybe you think you’re easygoing, but others experience you as passive-aggressive. Maybe you think you’re independent, but others see you as emotionally distant.
Blind spots damage relationships because you don’t realize the impact you’re having.
This section requires honesty—and humility.
What You Might Not See:
💡 Key Truth: “Your blind spots will sabotage your relationships until you’re willing to see them and do something about them.”
⚠️ Key Principle: “Feedback is a gift—even when it’s uncomfortable. The people who love you are often the ones brave enough to tell you what you need to hear.”
⚠️ Key Warning: “If multiple people you trust are expressing the same concern about your behavior and you keep dismissing it, pause and listen. It’s likely pointing to a real pattern or blindspot worth examining. Humble self-reflection is the beginning of growth—but so is discernment about whose voices deserve weight in your life.”
Your sense of self—how you see yourself and your worth—has been shaped by many influences:
Understanding what has shaped you helps you recognize what’s true about you versus what you’ve simply believed about yourself.
Family Influence:
Current Sense of Self:
💡 Key Insight: “Your worth isn’t determined by what you do, who loves you, or what you’ve achieved. Your worth is inherent—you are valuable simply because you exist.”
💡 Key Truth: “Many people build their sense of self on shaky foundations—approval, achievement, appearance. When those things shift, their identity crumbles. Build your identity on what’s solid and true.”
Not everyone is in a place to build or sustain a healthy, committed long-term romantic relationship.
Some people need to heal. Some need to grow. Some need to address patterns that could sabotage (or are sabotaging) the connection they’re building.
Readiness isn’t about being perfect—it’s about being healthy enough to show up well.
This section helps you assess where you are right now—and what might need attention as you continue forward.
Self-Awareness:
Emotional Health:
Independence:
Growth Mindset:
Healing:
As you look back at these questions, notice what stood out. You don’t need a perfect score—you need honest self-awareness.
For each question, you might find yourself thinking:
What this means:
The goal of this section on readiness isn’t to judge yourself as simply “ready” or “not ready”. Readiness is a continuum, not a binary concept. We all can work for greater “readiness” to thrive as a committed relationship partner. The purpose of these questions is to help you see more clearly where you are and what would help you become who you want to be in relationship.
💡 Key Truth: “One of the best gifts you can give a future partner is working toward becoming a healthier, more self-aware you. The inner work you do now—understanding your patterns, healing what you can, and growing in self-awareness—will serve both you and your future relationship well. You don’t need to be perfect, but the effort matters.”
⚠️ Key Warning: “Entering a relationship before you’re ready often leads to patterns you don’t want—either sabotaging something good or settling into an unhealthy dynamic. Be honest with yourself: Are you entering this relationship from a place of readiness and self-awareness, or from loneliness, fear, or the pressure to have ‘figured it out’? Your motivations matter more than your timeline.”
Before you finish this module, take a moment to pause and notice what stood out to you.
You don’t need to solve anything today—just identify one or two simple intentions that could help you move toward a healthier, more grounded version of yourself.
Individual Reflection:
You’re welcome to pick goals just for yourself, or—if you’re doing this with someone you’re dating or committed to—choose something you can practice together. Aim for something gentle and doable.
Here are a few examples:
“Before you can navigate a relationship, you need to understand the compass within you.
You can’t choose well if you don’t know yourself. You can’t show up authentically if you’re still hiding from yourself. You can’t build healthy relationships if you haven’t done the work to become a healthy person.
Self-awareness isn’t selfish—it’s essential.
The healthiest relationships are built by two people who know themselves deeply, show up authentically, and choose each other consciously.
Do the work. Know yourself. Then choose wisely.”