Placeholder Image

Subtitles section Play video

  • Why?

  • Can’t I talk like this?

  • And what if I actually just sucked on some helium?

  • Hey, it’s Marie Forleo and you are watching MarieTV, the place to be to create a business

  • and life you love.

  • Today’s episode is all about how to create a meaningful life.

  • Now, I know that is a big, big topic, but I think this is a very important discussion

  • to have, especially at this time of year, because typically in December and January

  • is when people start to pay extra close attention to how theyre living their life, if theyre

  • happy with their life, and what kind of changes, if any, they would like to make in the year

  • ahead.

  • Not to mention, any time of year when it comes to really serious things like depression and

  • addiction, what can often be a part of those issues is that we feel hopeless or helpless

  • or like our lives have no meaning.

  • That’s why personally I think this conversation needs to happen a lot more often, and hopefully

  • what we talk about today can help you start the conversation both for yourself and for

  • the people that you love.

  • Now, the best framework that I’ve ever found comes from one of my favorite books of all

  • times.

  • It's Viktor Frankl’s Man’s Search for Meaning.

  • This book right here.

  • So if youre not familiar with this book, you need to get it.

  • You need to read it ASAP.

  • It’s a memoir of Frankl’s life and the spiritual lessons that he learned in order

  • to survive Nazi concentration camps during World War II.

  • This book is heartbreaking, it is inspiring, it is riveting, and in my opinion, it is a

  • must read.

  • Now, one insight that I want to share right off the bat.

  • According to Frankl, he believed that one component of wellbeing is based on a certain

  • degree of tension between what one has already accomplished and what one has yet to achieve.

  • So in other words, who you are today and who you hope to become tomorrow.

  • So if youre worried or ever have those thoughts that somehow youre a failure because

  • you haven’t achieved all of your dreams quite yet, listen to me when I say this: you

  • are not a failure.

  • That tension is a really good thing, so embrace that drive that you have, embrace your ambition,

  • and the gap between where you are and who you are today and where you want to go and

  • who you want to become over the next year and ten years and so on.

  • So when it comes to making meaning in our lives, Frankl shares 3 simple avenues.

  • The first avenue is creating work or doing a deed.

  • In other words, having a project that youre working on that requires your skills and abilities.

  • You know, one of the most powerful stories in the book for me was when Frankl arrived

  • at Auschwitz and he had the manuscript for a book that he was working on, he had it in

  • his coat pocket.

  • And when he arrived, they confiscated it from him, just like everything else.

  • And he was heartbroken, but what he did throughout his time there is he started looking for these

  • little scraps of paper and he was collecting them so he could start recreating his manuscript.

  • And that really helped keep him focused.

  • And there was this other thing that he shared that I really related to.

  • You know, while I have a stepson and I have a fur baby, I don't have any biological children.

  • And he was talking about this book being his mental child and having the ability to focus

  • on that mental child and how important it was for him to nurture it and bring it to

  • life and put that manuscript back together was really a key in helping him survive that

  • experience.

  • The second avenue, by experiencing something or someone.

  • So in other words, experiencing beauty or truth or goodness or love, whether that’s

  • through nature or by loving someone else.

  • You know, Frankl shares these moments throughout the book.

  • For example, when he was being transferred from Auschwitz to a Bavarian camp by train,

  • how he and everyone was in this crowded train and they were crowding around this tiny barred

  • window just to catch a glimpse of the mountainside and the beautiful sunset.

  • And in Frankl’s own words, he said, “We were carried away by nature’s beauty, which

  • we had missed for so long.”

  • Or the other thing that really stood out to me in the book was how much Viktor connected

  • with his wife through his thoughts and his imagination and how much his love for her

  • kept him fueled and really kept him going.

  • And there was one passage that I want to read which sums it up.

  • He wrote: “Then I grasped the meaning of the greatest secret that human poetry and

  • human thought and belief have to impart: The salvation of man is through love and in love.

  • I understood how a man who has nothing left in this word still may know bliss, be it only

  • for a brief moment, in the contemplation of his beloved.”

  • The third and final avenue is the attitude that we take towards unavoidable suffering.

  • In other words, our human capacity to transform personal tragedy into triumph.

  • This is probably the biggest message that I took away from the book.

  • You know, Viktor discovered through surviving what is arguably one of the most horrific

  • experiences you could ever imagine that he was able to find meaning and growth and a

  • deeper sense of who he was as a human being as a result.

  • And there was one really incredible insight that he shared, which was this.

  • In some way, suffering ceases to be suffering at the moment it finds a meaning.”

  • We hear stories about this every day, right?

  • I mean, where people face unimaginable challenges that could break them, but somehow they wind

  • up growing stronger and more resilient and even more fulfilled as a result.

  • So while there are many different schools of thought around meaning and fulfilment,

  • I found Viktor Frankl’s three part framework really speaks to my heart.

  • One of the reasons that I love it so much is because I think many of us can get lost

  • looking outside of ourselves for how to create a meaningful life and what Viktor Frankl so

  • beautifully teaches us is that each of those three avenues is completely within our control.

  • So whether youre watching this over the holidays or any time of year and you're feeling

  • a little down or youre feeling a little empty, I want you to remember this:

  • Rather than searching for life’s meaning, remember that you always have the power to

  • create it.”

  • And before we wrap up, I want you to know something.

  • That you watching this show and being a part of everything that we do is truly meaningful

  • to me, so thank you for that.

  • And now I would love to hear from you.

  • If you’d like to experience more meaning in your life, try looking through the lens

  • of Frankl’s three avenues.

  • And then in the comments below, tell me about each one.

  • Tell me a little bit about what youre working on and someone you love.

  • And if there’s some unavoidable suffering, what is the deeper meaning that you might

  • be able to find in it?

  • As always, the best conversations happen after the episode over at MarieForleo.com, so head

  • on other there and leave a comment now.

  • And once you're there, be sure to subscribe to our email list and become an MF insider.

  • Youll get instant access to a fantastic training I created.

  • It’s called How to Get Anything You Want.

  • And youll also get exclusive content and some special giveaways and updates from me

  • that I just don't share anywhere else.

  • I’m wishing you and your loved ones a beautiful holiday season and I cannot wait to see you

  • back again in the new year.

  • Until then, stay on your game and keep going for your dreams because the world needs that

  • special gift that only you have.

  • Thank you again and I’ll catch you next time on MarieTV.

  • Greg, you know I’m always happy to see you.

  • Always happy to see you, brother.

  • Now it’s not a smushed brownie.

  • Gentle.

  • Like this.

  • Like silent meditation like the stink bomb’s over there.

  • I say we give it a go.

  • What’s the worst thing that could happen, right?

Why?

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it