Rate each life domain with brutal honesty, not aspiration
The wheel’s value is proportional to the honesty of your ratings — aspirational scores produce a pleasant picture that changes nothing.
Why it works
Self-serving bias and social desirability consistently distort self-assessments upward in domains where we feel responsible for our performance. An inflated rating removes the discomfort signal that motivates change; an honest low score creates the cognitive dissonance that drives action. The wheel works by surfacing the dissonance, so inflating scores defeats its only purpose.
How to do it
- Rate each domain (1 = deeply unsatisfied, 10 = thriving and satisfied) based on how it actually feels today, not what you want it to be.
- For any rating above 7, ask: "What would I need to give up or change to genuinely deserve this score?" — revise downward if the honest answer involves major shifts not yet made.
- Rate quickly in your first pass; overthinking produces rationalized rather than felt scores.
- Compare your ratings with those from six months ago if available — direction of movement often matters more than the absolute number.
Evidence
Self-report accuracy for life satisfaction domains is reasonable in aggregate but subject to social desirability bias; structured questioning and private reflection reduce the bias. The honest-rating principle is consistent with feedback research. (mechanistic)
No study has directly compared honest vs. inflated wheel ratings and outcomes. The principle rests on general research on honest self-assessment and feedback quality.
Common mistake
Rating domains on a "well, I should be grateful — things could be worse" basis, which compresses scores toward the middle and hides the actual outliers the wheel is designed to surface.
Practice this with IX Coach
IX Coach conducts a guided wheel-of-life conversation with calibrating questions that counter the upward bias, ensuring the ratings reflect felt reality rather than social performance.
7 days free, then $40/month (~$1.30/day).