Hello, this is AJ, welcome to the next lesson. This lesson is called “Search for Meaning.”
And I’m going to read a small section from a book called Man’s Search for Meaning by Viktor Frankl. This is a quite powerful book. Viktor Frankl was a psychologist in Germany before World War II. And he and all of his family were taken by the Nazis and they were put in concentration camps. Viktor Frankl survived, his entire family was killed.
Now he survived, but he suffered terribly in the concentration camps. And I’m sure all of you have seen movies or are familiar with all the horrible terrible things that happened in the German Nazi concentration camps.
Search for Meaning Main Text
Hello, this is AJ, welcome to the next lesson. This lesson is called “Search for
Meaning.”
And I’m going to read a small section from a book called Man’s Search for Meaning
by Viktor Frankl. This is a quite powerful book. Viktor Frankl was a psychologist in
Germany before World War II. And he and all of his family were taken by the Nazis
and they were put in concentration camps. Viktor Frankl survived, his entire family
was killed.
Now he survived, but he suffered terribly in the concentration camps. And I’m sure
all of you have seen movies or are familiar with all the horrible terrible things that
happened in the German Nazi concentration camps.
But what’s amazing about Viktor Frankl is that he took these terrible experiences
and he created a meaningful life from them. He did not quit. He did not become
angry and bitter. He did not learn to hate people. Instead, he learned to love and
to help people and he wrote this incredible book called Man’s Search for Meaning.
Because what he learned in the concentration camp was that our experiences are
not the most important thing, it’s the meaning we create from our experiences.
That’s what gives our lives power or what destroy us. And so in this book he talks
about all the different prisoners that were in the concentration camp with him and
he talks about which ones remained strong and which ones eventually gave up, quit
and they died, which ones became depressed, which ones lost all hope and which
ones continued to have strong minds and to still have hope.
So, really, he looked at this experience to learn more about human nature in this
terrible, terrible situation. And he decided that the difference was the meaning that
people gave to their experiences. And a lot of coaches, a lot of psychologists, talk
about this experience, this idea. That the meaning we give something is more
important than the experience itself.
For example, you can have a child that is abused by its parents, treated terribly and
you can have another child that’s abused by its parents, treated terribly and they
grow up and they have totally different lives. One child starts to drink or becomes
an alcoholic or a drug addict and they have a terrible life. The other child becomes
very successful and caring and loving and helps people and grows and heals the
pain.
What’s the difference, they both had the same situation, the same kinds of
experiences? Well the difference is the meaning that they gave to their
experience. Some people have a terrible experience and they decide that all people
are bad. That’s the meaning they give.
Now Viktor Frankl… That would be an easy conclusion, right? You’re in a
concentration camp in Germany and you’re seeing the worst possible behavior from
human beings. They’re murdering and killing people. They’re torturing them. If
you’re a prisoner it would be very easy to decide the meaning of this is all people
are terrible. Humanity is horrible. And, indeed, many people did decide that and
they became bitter and angry and they lost hope.
Viktor Frankl decided the opposite. The meaning he gave was that human beings
are powerful and strong, they can survive anything. He focused on the prisoners
who survived, who continued to love and to help people. That’s what he saw in thisexperience. Same experience, but he focused on something different. He found a
different meaning. He found hope. He found courage. He found love in this terrible
situation.
And this is something we do in every part of our lives. Not just these big terrible
things, but everything in our life we always decide the meaning. Any experience
you have you will choose a meaning for it, consciously or subconsciously, usually
subconsciously, right? Usually we are not aware of the meaning we’re giving it at
the time, but we have to be careful about that.
For example, let’s talk about something much less serious than concentration
camps and death in Germany. Let’s just talk about English learning. Now most of
you had rather negative experiences learning English in school. You had probably
very boring teachers. I’m sure you had terrible, terrible textbooks.
Maybe some of you did very badly on tests in your English classes. Most of you
probably had bad experiences trying to speak English. You studied and you felt like
you should be able to speak English, but you had trouble. It’s difficult for you or it
as difficult for you.
So what’s the meaning of these experiences? Many, many students decided that
the meaning is this “Ah, English is so hard, it’s impossible.” Some students decide
the meaning is “Ah, I’m not good at English. I’m terrible at English.” Right? That’s
the meaning that a lot of students, a lot of learners, give to the experience. But
other students decide a different meaning. They decide “Well, those methods were
not powerful. Those methods didn’t work, so I’ll find a different way to learn.”
Same experience, right? Both groups of students had the same terrible experiences
in school. One group decides “English is too hard. I’m not good at English.” A
different group decides “It’s not me, it’s just the method. I just need to find a
different method.” So they keep trying different methods, different methods and
then they succeed.
They succeed because they gave the bad experience a different meaning. They
decided “It’s just the method. It’s not me. It’s not English. It’s just the learning
method in school, so I will find a better way.”
So you need to look at these meaning and decide on your meanings. Decide and
choose positive meaning. Decide and choose meanings that are real and accurate,
don’t make something worse than it is.
Let me read a quick section from Viktor Frankl’s book. And in this section he’s
talking about the meaning of success and how to find success. Here it is.
“Again and again, I admonish my students, both in Europe and in America, don’t aim
at success. The more you aim at it and make it a target the more you’re going to
miss it. For success, like happiness, cannot be pursued, it must ensue and it only
does so as the unintended side effect of one’s dedication to a cause greater than
one’s self or as the byproduct of one’s surrender to a person other than one’s self.
“Happiness must happen and the same holds true for success. You have to let it
happen by not caring too much about it. I want you to listen to your conscience and
do what your conscience commands and to do this with the best of your knowledge
and ability. Then you will live to see that in the long run…in the long run…success
will follow you precisely because you had forgotten about it, precisely because you
focused on something bigger than yourself.”Okay, that’s a nice little paragraph there. So what’s he’s saying is he’s talking
about meaning again. And he says you need to find a meaning bigger than just
you. If you just focus on your personal success, like getting a good score on a test
or getting a better job, you will actually find it difficult to succeed. You will not get
that success easily.
But if you find a different meaning, if you focus on a goal that’s bigger than you,
bigger than just you, if you focus on contributing and connecting to other people
and helping other people and using your success to help people and to do
something bigger than just you, you will actually succeed more.
So what’s he’s saying is if you choose a goal bigger than just yourself, if you choose
to help more than just yourself, you will also benefit more and that, in fact, you’ll
get more success than if you’re selfish. So that’s a nice idea -- and we’ve talked a
little bit about it in past lessons, but I want to talk about it again -- finding a bigger
meaning for your life, not just you. And that goes for everything you do, so when
you’re learning English, again, finding a meaning for your English learning that’s
bigger than just you.
Yes, absolutely, think of all the great reasons that you will benefit, personally, from
improved English. Sure. Those are great goals, those are great reasons, but you
must also find reasons bigger than just you. How will you use your English ability to
help other people, to help your company and your coworkers, to help your family, to
help your friends, to help other people who are learning English?
That’s what you’ve got to do. You’ve got to find a bigger meaning. That bigger
meaning will guarantee your success. You’ll succeed faster if you have a bigger
meaning. If you only have small, personal, selfish goals you might succeed, but
you’ll succeed more slowly.
And this is true in all areas of life, not just learning English. The more you can find a
bigger meaning for your life beyond just yourself the more power and passion and
success you will have. It’s kind of strange, it’s a paradox. A paradox is something
that seems to be opposite. It means to opposite things that are true at the same
time, paradox. So the more you think about other people the more you will benefit
yourself.
So, for example, in business, if you think more about your customers and helping
them and helping their lives you will benefit more. You will get more customers and
more money and you’ll become richer and richer by helping other people, by
thinking about other people. If you think only about money for yourself then
customers will not trust you and you’ll actually make less money, so it’s the same
idea.
So that’s why I focus so much as a teacher and as a businessperson on helping my
members, helping my students. That’s what excites me. It’s a bigger purpose than
just me and that gives me the energy and the drive and it helps me succeed at a
much higher level. So I hope you’ll do the same with your English learning, with
your career, with everything in your life. Try to find a bigger, deeper meaning
beyond just yourself.
Well, that’s the end of our lesson “Search for Meaning.” I hope you enjoyed it. And,
if you get a chance, absolutely, please, read the book Man’s Search for Meaning by
Viktor Frankl. It’s a powerful book.
I will see you next time.