Sunday, December 16, 2012

Frankl-y Speaking

Man's Search for Meaning is a unique account of the Holocaust. Unlike Elie Wiesel in Night, Frankl was an adult while in the camps and saw it through his background in psychiatry. This allowed him to analyze the mindset of the prisoner, and examine what made people persevere in the face of intense suffering. I was surprised by how much of a difference it made to have something to hope for, to look forward to. Frankl thought not only of his wife but of the manuscript of his book that was destroyed in Auschwitz. He credits his survival, besides some luck, with his determination to re-write the book. The importance of one's mental state was demonstrated in a story about of of Frankl's friends who had a dream they'd be liberated by March 30th. As the day approached, it was pretty obvious they weren't close to being liberated. The man became ill with typhus and died on the 30th. Frankl believes that the man was so set on being free that day, that when he realized he wouldn't be he lost the will to live. Sometimes the difference between life and death was just a mindset.

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