HOPE SPRINGS ETERNAL
In Alexander Pope’s “Essay on Man” written in 1732, the English
poet penned this timeless line of prose: “Hope springs eternal in the human
breast.” His insight calls to mind three Jewish psychiatrists who lived
in and around Vienna in the period leading up to World War II.
The first of these three psychiatrists, Sigmund Freud, spent years
studying people, striving to understand what makes us tick. He reached
the conclusion that the fundamental drive in human beings is the search for
PLEASURE. According to Freud, it’s our basic need for pleasure that
explains why we do what we do.
The second, Alfred Adler, also spent years studying human behavior.
His studies led him to disagree with Sigmund Freud. Adler was
convinced that the bottom line in understanding human behavior is POWER.
In his view, all of us grow up feeling somewhat inferior and powerless.
Thus, life becomes a drive to gain control, to feel more important and more powerful.
Viktor Frankl sought to follow in the footsteps of his mentors,
Freud and Adler. But before his career gained traction, World War II
began. The Nazi invasion brought danger and death to millions of Jews.
Freud and Adler were world renowned scholars, so they managed to escape.
Frankl wasn’t so fortunate. He was arrested and detained in a Nazi
concentration camp – four long years.
After the war ended, Frankl was released and resumed his career.
Carefully evaluating his experiences as a prisoner, he noted something
strange and unexpected – that the people who survived were not always the ones
that others would expect. Many who were physically strong wasted away and
died while others who were physically weak grew stronger and survived.
Why? What was it that enabled them to hang on through the living
hell of a Nazi concentration camp?
Frankl reflected on the theories of his mentors. Freud’s
pleasure principle could not explain it. During four desperate and terrible
years, the men in his camp knew only pain, suffering and degradation.
Pleasure was not even a word in their vocabulary. It certainly
wasn’t pleasure that kept them going.
What then of Adler’s theory about power being the basic human need?
That wouldn’t explain it either. Frankl and his fellow Jews were
completely powerless during their years in the concentration camp. Each
day they stared down the barrels of loaded guns, they were treated like
animals, they felt enemy boots on their faces and watched helplessly while
fellow Jews were executed via a gas chamber genocide. They neither had
power, nor any prospects of power.
So Viktor Frankl came up with his own theory. He concluded
that the primary difference between those who survived and those who perished
was HOPE. Those who survived never gave up the belief that their lives
had value and meaning. Despite everything going on around them, they
believed that their suffering would eventually end and they would again live
meaningful, purposeful lives. What is this basic human drive?
According to Frankl, it is the need to live with a sense of purpose. Not
pleasure. Not power. MEANING.
Consider your present life situation. What’s really going on
with you? More importantly, what are you hoping and trusting GOD for in
the long-term? Whatever that is, it constitutes your LIFE-VISION, which must and shall be
written in the indelible ink of HOPE.
Keep hope alive.
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