Viktor Frankl Insanin Anlam Arayisi ❲90% COMPLETE❳
There is a moment in Viktor Frankl’s harrowing memoir, Man’s Search for Meaning , that changes the way you look at suffering forever.
Frankl’s message is not that you should enjoy the pain. It is that you should look for what the pain is asking you to become.
This is the meaning found in love, beauty, and nature. Frankl wrote that even in the camp, a single sunset over the barbed wire could be enough to make a man forget his hunger. He famously said: "Love is the only way to grasp another human being in the innermost core of their personality." viktor frankl insanin anlam arayisi
You cannot always choose what happens to you. But you can always, always choose what happens within you. And that choice is the ultimate human freedom. If you haven't read it yet, pick up Man’s Search for Meaning by Viktor Frankl. It is short, brutal, and the most life-affirming book you will ever read.
This is the hardest lesson. Frankl argued that if life has any meaning at all, then suffering must also have meaning. Suffering ceases to be suffering at the moment it finds a meaning. There is a moment in Viktor Frankl’s harrowing
Why the question "What do I want from life?" is less important than "What is life asking of me?"
Standing in that unspeakable reality, Frankl had an epiphany. He realized that while the Nazis could take away his clothes, his hair, his food, and even his name, they could not take away one thing: This is the meaning found in love, beauty, and nature
This is the foundation of Logotherapy, Frankl’s school of psychology. While Freud believed humans were driven by the "will to pleasure," and Adler believed we are driven by the "will to power," Frankl argued for something much deeper: The Danger of the "Existential Vacuum" Frankl coined a term that is perhaps more relevant today than it was in 1946: the existential vacuum (or "inner void").