The Words

Ikigai (生き甲斐)

Japanese · 14th century · 14th century
Ikigai is a word the Japanese language has carried since at least the fourteenth century, describing the source of value that makes a life feel worth living, and its Western repackaging as a career-planning tool reveals more about the culture doing the repackaging than about the concept itself.

Ikigai (生き甲斐) combines iki (生き), meaning life or living, and gai (甲斐), meaning worth, effect, or result. The compound has been used in Japanese since at least the Muromachi period (1336 to 1573). Its meaning is closer to "that which makes life worth living" than to any career framework. In Japanese usage, one's ikigai can be entirely personal, a garden, a grandchild, a daily practice, with no requirement that it generate income, serve a market, or align with professional skills.

The concept gained international attention following the publication of research on Okinawan centenarians, who were studied for their extraordinary longevity. Researchers noted that many Okinawan elders described having a clear ikigai, a sense of purpose that structured their days and gave them reason to get up each morning. The Japanese psychiatrist Mieko Kamiya explored the concept in depth in her 1966 book Ikigai-ni-tsuite (On the Meaning of Life), examining it through psychological and philosophical lenses.

In the 2010s, a Venn diagram featuring four overlapping circles labeled "what you love," "what the world needs," "what you can be paid for," and "what you are good at" became widely associated with ikigai in English-language career advice and self-help content. This diagram does not appear in Japanese scholarship on ikigai. Its origins trace to a purpose diagram created by Andrés Zuzunaga, a Spanish astrologer, which was later relabeled by Marc Winn in a 2014 blog post.

In Japan, ikigai is not a career optimization tool. Surveys conducted by the Japanese government's Central Research Services have found that the majority of Japanese respondents locate their ikigai in family, hobbies, health, or personal interests rather than in work or professional achievement.