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The Ikigai Diagram Explained

Understanding the 4 Circles That Can Help You Find Your Life's Purpose

The Ikigai diagram has become one of the most recognized self-discovery frameworks in the world. But what do the circles actually mean? And is the diagram truly Japanese? Let's break it down.

Your Passion
Your Mission
Your Vocation
Your Profession
IKIGAI

What Is the Ikigai Diagram?

The Ikigai diagram is a visual framework showing four overlapping circles. Where all four intersect is said to be your Ikigai — your reason for being. Each circle represents a fundamental aspect of a fulfilling life.

While the diagram is a powerful self-reflection tool, it's important to understand both its strengths and its origins.

The 4 Circles of Ikigai

Each circle represents a key dimension of purpose

What You Love

Your Passion

Activities that bring you joy, energize you, and make time fly. These are the things you'd do even if nobody paid you — painting, teaching, coding, gardening, or having deep conversations.

What activities make you lose track of time?

Examples: Creating art, solving puzzles, mentoring others, exploring nature, writing stories

What the World Needs

Your Mission

The problems you care about solving and the impact you want to make. This circle connects your personal purpose to something larger than yourself — community, society, or the planet.

What change do you want to see in the world?

Examples: Education access, environmental care, mental health support, building community, reducing inequality

What You're Good At

Your Vocation

Your natural talents, developed skills, and areas of expertise. These are the things that come easily to you and that others often ask for your help with.

What do people come to you for?

Examples: Organizing systems, public speaking, analytical thinking, creative design, emotional intelligence

What You Can Be Paid For

Your Profession

Skills and services that have market value. This practical circle ensures your purpose can sustain your life — where your abilities meet what people are willing to pay for.

What skills do people pay for in your field?

Examples: Technical expertise, consulting, craftsmanship, management, healthcare, teaching

Where the Circles Overlap

The magic happens at the intersections

When two circles overlap, they create powerful combinations. Understanding these overlaps helps you identify where you're thriving and where something might be missing.

Passion + Mission

Delight & Fulfillment

You love what you do AND it helps others. You feel deeply fulfilled but may struggle to earn from it.

"I'm doing meaningful work I love, but I'm not sure how to make a living from it."

Passion + Vocation

Satisfaction

You love what you do AND you're great at it. You feel competent and happy but may question whether it matters.

"I'm great at what I love, but does it really make a difference?"

Mission + Profession

Excitement & Complacency

The world needs what you do AND you're paid for it. You feel useful but may lack personal passion.

"I'm paid well for important work, but something feels like it's missing."

Vocation + Profession

Comfort but Emptiness

You're skilled AND well-paid. You feel comfortable but may wonder if there's more to life.

"I'm successful on paper, but I don't feel truly alive."

The Center: Your Ikigai

When all four circles overlap — when you do something you love, that you're good at, that the world needs, and that you can be paid for — you've found your Ikigai. It's rare to achieve perfect balance, but the pursuit itself brings meaning.

The Truth About the Ikigai Diagram

It's not actually traditional Japanese

Here's something most websites won't tell you: the famous Ikigai Venn diagram is NOT a traditional Japanese concept. Understanding its real origin helps you use it more wisely.

The Real Origin Story

2011

In 2011, Spanish astrologer Andrés Zuzunaga created a Venn diagram called "Purpose" (Propósito) showing the intersection of passion, mission, vocation, and profession.

2014

In 2014, British blogger Marc Winn wrote a blog post combining Zuzunaga's diagram with the Japanese word "ikigai" — and the viral "Ikigai diagram" was born.

2016+

The diagram spread across social media, books, and TED talks, becoming one of the most shared self-help frameworks in history.

What Ikigai Really Means in Japan

In Japan, ikigai is much simpler and broader than the 4-circle framework suggests:

  • Ikigai can be small — your morning coffee, tending your garden, or chatting with a neighbor
  • It's not about career optimization — many Japanese people find ikigai in daily rituals and relationships
  • There's no requirement to monetize it — unlike the diagram which includes "what you can be paid for"
  • It's deeply personal — there's no formula or framework, just awareness of what gives your life meaning
  • Neuroscientist Ken Mogi identifies 5 pillars: starting small, accepting yourself, connecting with others, finding joy in little things, and being present

The Diagram Is Still Valuable

Even though the Venn diagram isn't authentically Japanese, it remains a powerful self-reflection tool. It helps you think systematically about purpose, identify gaps in your life, and take action. Just don't mistake the map for the territory — true ikigai is felt, not diagrammed.

Which Circle Dominates Your Life?

Take a quick self-assessment

Our comprehensive Ikigai Test analyzes all four circles and reveals your unique purpose profile — including your dominant type and personalized insights.

Frequently Asked Questions