Follow flow as a clue

Track the activities where time disappears — they point toward love and skill at once.

Why it works

Absorbed engagement (flow) tends to occur where genuine interest meets a matched skill level, so it quietly marks the love-and-skill overlap the diagram chases. Because flow is felt rather than reasoned, it bypasses the "shoulds" that distort deliberate self-assessment. Noticing it is a low-bias way to gather evidence about where you belong.

How to do it

  1. For a week, log moments when you lost track of time and were not just numbing out.
  2. Note the underlying skill each one drew on, not just the surface activity.
  3. Look for the common ingredient across them and do more of that ingredient.

Evidence

Flow is a well-studied state arising from a challenge-skill balance, and self-reported flow correlates with engagement and wellbeing. Using flow as a signal for ikigai is a reasonable extension, not a directly tested method. (observational)

Flow indicates engagement, not necessarily meaning or contribution; it is one lens among the four.

Sources

  • Csikszentmihalyi, foundational work on flow and the challenge-skill balance

Common mistake

Confusing flow with mere escapism. Bingeing or doom-scrolling kills time too, but it is the absence of challenge, not absorption in it.

Practice this with IX Coach

IX Coach helps you spot which activities reliably produce real absorption versus numbing, and steers more of your week toward the former.

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