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Reframing Your Values: Kabhi Socha Hai If They're Even Yours?

  • Jul 17
  • 2 min read

In therapy, we often talk about goals, patterns, trauma — but rarely do we pause and ask a very basic question: What are the values guiding your life? And more importantly — are they really yours?


For many people, what they call “values” are actually silent expectations passed down from childhood. They aren’t born from awareness, but from adaptation. These values once helped you survive, gain approval, or stay safe. But now, they might be the very things keeping you stuck.


a girl, making a choice, from the closet of values

Are Your Values Truly Yours, or Just Programming?

Most of us grow up in systems — families, schools, cultures — that reward predictability and obedience. From a young age, we’re taught what’s “right,” what’s “good,” what’s “respectful.” Over time, we absorb these ideas and call them our values.

But pause for a moment.


Do you value selflessness… or were you conditioned to never have needs? Do you value family… or do you fear what happens if you ever walk away? Do you value hard work… or are you terrified of being called lazy?


This is where reframing your values becomes essential. Not to reject everything, but to sort through it. To ask: Is this value still serving me — or silently sabotaging me?


Why Reframing Your Values is a Radical Act of Self-Awareness

Reframing your values doesn’t mean throwing them all away. It means redefining them with intention, not obligation.


Because when your values come from guilt, fear, or survival, they will never give you peace. But when they come from clarity, connection, and choice — they become your compass.

This is the work we do in therapy at SEVEE. We help you slow down, step back, and take an honest look at the beliefs you live by. We ask: Who gave you these values? Who benefits when you follow them? What would change if you chose your own?


Reframing Your Values: The First Step to Emotional Freedom

If you’ve ever felt stuck, guilty, not good enough — it may not be about who you are. It may be about who you were trained to be.

You don’t need to become someone new. You just need to become someone true.


Kabhi socha hai? Your freedom might begin not with changing your life, but by reframing your values.



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