The Fatal Consequences of a Meaningless Existence



Number of words: 199

Once an individual’s search for a meaning is successful, it not only renders him happy but also gives him the capability to cope with suffering. And what happens if one’s groping for a meaning has been in vain? This may well result in a fatal condition. Let us recall, for instance, what sometimes happened in extreme situations such as prisoner-of-war camps or concentration camps. In the first, as I was told by American soldiers, a behavior pattern crystallized to which they referred as “give-up-itis.” In the concentration camps, this behavior was paralleled by those who one morning, at five, refused to get up and go to work and instead stayed in the hut, on the straw, wet with urine and faeces. Nothing, neither warnings nor threats could induce them to change their minds. And then something typical occured: they took out a cigarette from deep down in a pocket where they had hidden it and started smoking. At that moment we know that for the next forty eight hours or so we would watch them dying. Meaning orientation had subsided, and consequently the seeking of immediate pleasure had taken over.

Excerpted from ‘Man’s Search for meaning’ by Viktor Frankl

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