Gardening Magazine

What Are Your Core Values?

By Sophiecussen

I was reading an article the other day by Craig Ballantyne of Early to Rise.

It was all about spending time with people who can do real good in your life, and for whom you can do good back to them/for them.  Like a support system but made up of people rather than anything materialistic.

It really hit me this article because although I love to be surrounded by positive people they are not always that easy to track down and this was basically a great piece on how to go about finding good people in your life.

Finding Positive People

Now I don’t know about you but I always just thought that while you can make a few decisions basically most of the people in your life come from either family, extended family, college, school and Uni friends and if you’re lucky a few extra from your working world.

But that doesn’t seem to be the case at all.  You can actually choose the people you want to spend time with, and you can do it in just three steps:

Step 1) Identify what you value in people.

Step 2) Identify where this type of person spends time.

Step 3) Go there.

Courtesy of Early to Rise.

We’ll get into values in a moment but if you think about it everyone you spend time with at this very moment are the people you like (obviously because they make you feel good, enjoy your company and somewhere along the line, you gelled with them).

But Why and How did you Gel with your Friends?

Thinking about the people I do enjoy spending time with (and to be honest there aren’t that many as I’m an introvert and prefer my own company), they are the ones that are funny, creative, reliable, like a deep conversation and are in no way egotistical.  I come away from them feeling good about them and good about myself.

The people I like sharing time with over an internet connection are big believers, huge dreamers and all into creating things.

What do both these sets of people have in common?  Well, they all have core values that I identify with.  Values I strongly believe in.  They make me who I am.

So, then I thought, well what if (because the world is a pretty big place) I expanded my circle of friends, based on the three steps above.  Would I be able to?  Is it really that easy to ‘hunt’ people down that share my core values, especially when I find anything social group related rather daunting and horribly draining.

Could I Actually Invent my Own World?

Well actually social media doesn’t make that happening all that difficult.  I’ve pretty much set the list of people I follow, on say Twitter, to be all those that share my core values.

Of all the social media sources I use I have to say Twitter is most comfortable to me because I am conversing only with people who, like me, are enthusiastic about gardening, or photography, or writing.  Who are polite and courteous on-line (at least) and who are positive and pro-active about life (that doesn’t mean to say they are always that positive off line, but I don’t get to see/hear that).

Outside of social media it’s slightly harder.  I have in the past been part of green groups, writing groups, gay groups and even tennis groups to share what I thought would be core values but it never really seemed to turn out well.

Any group of people tends to have the full plethra of personalities most of which I come away from wondering what the hell we all had in common because I felt more often than not rather uncomfortable and not excited or enthused as perhaps I’d expect?

I never blame them, it’s totally my fault as I never really give these groups more than a couple of tries.

Looking at This a Different Way

However rather than groups it would seem I need to be thinking in more individual and specific terms – like and dislikes are one thing.

I like gardening – a lot of people like gardening but that is not the same as being passionate about growing vegetables, not using pesticides, not being bothered about entering competitions, not even wanting to share my gardening space with anyone.

So what I need to find are people that also are deeply passionate about what they do in their garden but who keep it fun and who, like me, don’t want to have a regular meeting about it but just discuss the good and challenging things about growing veggies.

Same with other values – I love being around positive people.  Not the ones that are so positive they come across all cheesy with a hint of boring to them.  I mean the people that don’t even know they are beaming out their positivity to others.  The people you come away from feeling pumped up by.  Not the ones that leave you feeling downright jealous, or sad or helpless.

Again, on-line it’s great and easy to find such positive people but in real life where do these people live let alone reside?  It’s not like you can be positive 100% of the time (how bloody knackering would that be?), and short of finding a life coach that’s paid to be ‘cheerful’, these people sound rather elusive.

It’s a bit of an expensive trek to keep heading over to America every time I need my ‘good’ feelings topped up (although it would be worth it because I got such a buzz from NYC), so rather than look for the people I need to spend time with perhaps I need to be the person other people want to spend time with….

Makes you think…

What are your core values and do people you share time with have those same values?

Do you think it’s possible to surround yourself with totally positive people?

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Cover Photo courtesy of Arielle Nadel


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