Terrible things are happening in our world. The worst nightmares of the mind-twentieth century seem to be returning. There are days when we might find it hard to rise above despair or escape a low, lethargic mood freighted with our own negative mantras. On days like that, I often call on one of the greatest life coaches I know.
I know him from his most famous
book. Maybe you do too. His book is titled Man’s Search for
Meaning. His name is Viktor Frankl. He was an Existentialist — which
is to say, someone who believes that we must be authors of meaning for our own
lives — and a successful psychiatrist in Vienna before Nazi Germany swallowed
Austria in 1938. He was a Jew and a free-thinking intellectual, two reasons for
the Nazis to send him to a concentration camp. For several years he was in
Auschwitz, the most notorious of the Nazi death camps.
In the camp, every vestige of
humanity was taken from him, except what he could sustain in his mind and his
heart. He was in constant pain, reduced to a near-skeleton with a tattooed
number on his arm, liable to be beaten or killed at any moment on the whim of a
guard. He was there to be worked to death. He watched those around him shot or
beaten or carted off to the gas chambers every day.
He made an astonishing choice. He
decided that, utterly deprived of freedom in the nightmare world around him, he
would tend one precious candle of light within. He would exercise the freedom
to choose his attitude. It sounds preposterous, if you don’t know
the story of what unfolded. When people tell us we have a bad attitude in
ordinary circumstances, we are usually not grateful. The suggestion that we can
choose our attitude when the world around us seems cold and bleak, or we have
suffered a major setback, even heartbreak, sounds cruel, and maybe
preposterous. But let’s stay with Viktor Frankl.
When the light went out in his
world, he managed to light that inner candle of vision. Despite the pain in his
body and the screams and groans around him, he made an inner movie, a film of a
possible life in a world where the Nazis had been defeated and Hitler was a
memory. It was an impossible vision of course, an escapist fantasy. There was
no way he was going to survive Auschwitz.
But he kept working on his inner
movie, night after night, as director, scriptwriter and star. He produced a
scene in which he was giving a lecture in a well-filled auditorium in New York
City. His body had filled out, and he was wearing a very fine custom suit. The
people in the audience were intelligent and enthusiastic. The theme of his
lecture was “The Psychology of the Concentration Camps.” In his movie, not only
were the death camps a thing of the past. He had retained the sanity and
academic objectivity to speak about what went on during the Holocaust from a
professional psychiatric perspective.
This exercise in inner vision,
conducted under almost unimaginably difficult circumstances, got Viktor Frankl
through. Not only did he survive the death camp; in 1946, one year after the
war, he gave that lecture in his nice new suit in the New York auditorium from
his inner movie set.
What do we take away from this?
First, that however tough our
situation may seem to be, we always have the freedom to choose our
attitude, and this can change everything. Let’s allow William James to
chime in: “The greatest weapon against stress is our ability to choose one
thought over another.”
Second, that our problems, however
bad, are unlikely to be quite as bad as the situation of someone who has been
sent to a Nazi death camp. That thought may help us to gain perspective, and to
stand back from a welter of grief and self-pity and rise to a place where we
can start to dream up something better.
Third, we can make inner
movies, and if they are good enough it is possible that they will play in
the theater of the world.
If we take Viktor Frankl’s example
to heart, we see that choosing your attitude can be an
exercise in creative imagination that is much more practical and original than
trying to edit your inner soundtrack (though that is worth trying) or telling
yourself that you can’t afford the energy of a negative thought (you can learn
to use the energy of any strong emotion, including grief and rage).
Text adapted from Growing Big Dreams: Manifesting Your Heart's Desires through the Twelve Secrets of Imagination by Robert Moss. Published by New World Library
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