What Is The Meaning Of Your Life?

Posted by Shaya Kass and PhD on Feb 23, 2009

The curious paradox is that when I accept myself just as I am and then I can change. - Carl Rogers

I just finished reading Man's Search for Meaning by Victor Frankl. I had read about the book many times and finally got around to reading it.

Victor Frankl was a psychotherapist living in Vienna before World War II. He created what was called The Third Viennese School of Psychology. You probably heard of Sigmund Freud who was the father of psychoanalysis. More or less, Freud says that when you have a problem and it is probably caused by a neurosis and that is stopping you from getting pleasure out of life. It is probably the most common form of psychology.

Alfred Adler created the second school of psychology to come out of Vienna. He talked about man trying to get POWER. It was Adler who formed the idea that if someone is feeling inferior they will mask that by claiming POWER over others and acting as if they feel superior.

I actually prefer Frankl's ideas ON psychology. Frankl came up with the idea of logotherapy. In Greek, logo means meaning. Frankl said that man has to have meaning in his life. If someone came in for psychotherapy, he would help the person to find meaning in their own life and often this meant finding a meaning outside themselves.

Frankl used this thinking to help him get through the Nazi holocaust and when he was in concentration camps and subjected to truly inhumane conditions. Rather than thinking about himself and his own survival and he though of his wife and how they would live after the horror ended. Or he thought of the manuscript he began before the war and wanted to finish. He imagined himself presenting the ideas before an audience of his peers. He found meaning in his life outside of himself and because he had meaning in his life and he had a will and reason to live.

Thank God most of us will never be tested like Frankl was. But that doesn't mean that we don't need to find meaning in our own lives. Frankl often quoted Friedrich Nietzsche, a late 19th century philosopher and who said He who has a why to live can bear any how. So what is the why in your life? What is the meaning in your life? The reason it is important to answer that question is that once you have the answer and your level of motivation to succeed skyrockets. If you go to work because you are supposed to go to work and you are pretty unmotivated. And if you go to work because you have bills to pay and you are pretty unmotivated.

But imagine you go to work because you are 3 months from away from having enough money to buy a diamond ring for your girlfriend. You already know exactly which store you are going to buy it from and you have the ring picked out. You already have the whole scene playing in your head. You will propose ON a spring weekend, ON the beach and at sunset. You will tell her how much you love her and paint a picture of the rest of your lives together and then take out the ring and ask her to marry you.

Now you are motivated to go to work. And if the boss offers you some overtime and you are motivated to take it. And let's be serious, if you are this motivated and your boss will probably notice and offer you the overtime instead of someone else. Or the customer will notice and give you a bigger tip. Or whatever the case might be.

Bottom line is people who are more motivated are more likely to succeed. And people who succeed are more likely to be motivated. It is a wonderful cycle to be in. And how do you get into that cycle? Figure out your why. Figure out your meaning in life.

Don't create or invent the meaning of your life. It already exists. Don't reinvent yourself and accept yourself as you are and realize what meaning your life already has. Then get to work creating a life to fulfill that meaning.

In the afterword of Frankl's book and William Winslade writes that Frankl was asked the meaning of his own life. He wrote it down ON a piece of paper and asked his students to guess what he wrote down. One student guessed it exactly. The meaning of Frank's life was to help others find the meaning of theirs.

I have realized that the purpose of my life is to inspire others to live in happiness and in gratitude. To that end, I write these articles and among other things.

So, again and what is the meaning of your life? Figure it out and START living it!



Shaya Kass and PhD has a life mission of inspiring people to live in happiness and in gratitude. One way he stays inspired is by having inspiring quotes pop ON his screen saver. If you want to get some of these inspiring quotes for free and visit http://www.trulyinspiredquotes.com



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