April 29th 2008

Viktor Frankl

He who has a why to live can bear with almost any how. ~Nietzsche

Once again, I was compelled to re-read Viktor Frankl’s book, “Man’s Search For Meaning,” because I am wanting to begin another book which he also wrote, entitled “The Doctor And The Soul.” This book, “Man’s Search For Meaning”, is a good way to acquaint yourself with Dr. Frankl and the work he contributed to this world. I have the deepest respect and admiration for this man.

Dr. Frankl was a professor of Neurology and Psychiatry a the University of Vienna Medical School until his death in 1997. Because of the work he did, he had a chance to obtain a US Immigration Visa just before the United States entered World War II. After much turmoil in his mind and heart as to what he thought would be the right thing to do, he decided not to leave his old parents alone since everyone knew what was in store for the Jewish people during that time. This remarkable and unselfish decision itself, speaks volumes of what kind of human being this man was.

I have often thought that this man ended up experiencing for himself the “will for meaning” - the very thing to which he dedicated his entire adult life to. He endured three years in concentration camps, one of which was Auschwitz. His parents and his sister were killed. He survived.

Anyone who has experienced suffering should read this book. At some point in life, each of us will suffer, in some form or in some fashion. This book always gives me such a rich experience of believing in the potentiality that lies in all of us, irregardless of what our circumstances are at the moment. Finding meaning in all that life presents to us really and truly is a personal choice.

Viktor Frankl had a vision. His vision was to see the Statue of Liberty on the East Coast supplemented by a Statue of Responsibility on the West Coast. Please click to see this clip. The Catholic Pope, Benedict XVI, very recently left from a visit to the United States. His speeches were remarkable and very timely. One of the things he reminded us of is that “Freedom is not only a gift, but also a summons to personal responsibility.”

The life that we have been given, is a life worth living. I often ask the question, “What is life asking of me?” The answer will be different for each one of us.

April 27th 2008

Being Valued

A very dear reader forwarded this lovely message today and I was so touched by it that I wanted to share it with all my readers. Thank you, Jimmy! I’m glad you visit here!

Please click here.

April 24th 2008

What Of The Children?

I have come to realize more and more that the greatest disease and the greatest sufferings is to be unwanted, unloved, uncared for, to be shunned by everyone, to be just nobody (to no one). ~ Mother Teresa of Calcutta (1910-1997)

It has been heartbreaking to watch as the events involving the Polygamist sect unfold in Eldorado, Texas. There are many that are suffering. It is so sad to see entire family units being broken up and babies, small children, and teenagers being taken away to strange places and away from all that is familiar to them. In my opinion, it seems that the children are always the ones who end up suffering the most. As I am reading and hearing of places that are preparing for these children, one only 15 minutes from my home, I could not help but recap my own experience living in an orphanage.

Most of my readers know that I was born in Germany and raised in an orphanage until I was 14 years old. Overall, my orphanage days were good, and I am thankful that I was there instead of the abusive environment that I came into when I came to this country. However, that is only telling part of a story. Today, I would like to tell you a side of being orphaned that is less attractive and very painful. I worry about these children for that reason. Although, I must stipulate that those children who have been subjected to abuse must be removed to a safer environment right away.

Something profoundly deep happens to a human being when they are taken away from their mother at a very young age. I was between 1 and 2 years old when this happened to me. I do not mean to undermine the role of a father here, but there is a deeply nurturing relationship that takes place between the mother and the baby. The suckling of the warm and tender breast, and being held tightly to the mother’s bosom, tells the baby it is in a warm and very safe embrace. There is an unconditional love between mother and child that tends to quickly want to heal infractions and mistakes, and make a child feel safe and reassured. All these things and more are deeply comforting and reassuring for a child.

There are innumerable efforts that are made by the mother and father to make sure that the child is cared for in providing a safe and loving home. They make sure that clothes are washed, and that the child has a clean bed to lie down in. They provide nutritious meals and quality family time around the dinner table. They listen to the endless stories about school classes and attend school programs where the child can display talents and pursue opportunities nurtured by the parents. They teach their children when it is appropriate to talk, and when it is appropriate to listen to others.

Come evening time, I can only imagine that there must be nothing sweeter in the life of a child than the tender “good-night” kiss of a mother and father. The prayers of protection and grace by those parents will teach a child of something far greater than just himself. Then, being snuggled in for the night by his mother and father who deeply love him, his sleep can be deep and sound without any unnecessary cares and worries. Being a mother of two, I write from my experience as a mother as well as my experience as an orphan.

Children who have been taken away from their mothers and fathers all have one thing in common; that is, a hole in them that is difficult to repair and fill. Such a child will search for something or someone because somewhere deep inside them they knew they belonged somewhere. Finding that “place of belonging” is a very long and painful journey. There are many rejections along the way, and that child will often be very clumsy in finding that “belonging” again. These rejections only add to the greatest of all rejections, which is being taken away, for whatever reasons, from their mother and father. The slightest hint that there might be such a belonging again can often turn into an obsessive expression because they desperately fear that they will lose that warm and nurturing feeling of “home” once again. Juggling these emotions and keeping them in balance can be very embarrassing . . . and tiring. No matter how old they are, their inner self is seeking that which was lost. They become their own parent, and that can be a very difficult task.

It takes self-honesty to understand that there are nobler pursuits than feelings of neglect and feelings of sadness for one’s own losses. Many tears are shed during this process. It is important that one is kind and gentle with themselves as they grow up and heal. There is the hope that someone will come along that will be wise enough and loving enough to understand them as they are.

Children who have been rejected by their parents, or who have been taken away, will feel a sense of brokenness and inferiority. Secretly, they will often think to themselves, “Everyone seems to have it together somehow except for me. Everyone is smarter. Everyone is more gifted. Everyone has more friends. Everyone has more opportunities. Everyone can do it better. What about me? What is wrong with me? Why am I not wanted?” These are questions that will haunt many such children for the rest of their lives. The loneliness these children experience is profoundly deep and often beyond words because the unconditional love and presence of a mother and father simply is not there. The person they truly are is not the person they see in the mirror. Their judgment about themselves has become clouded and impaired. The true potential that lies within them is often never recognized. Walls of protection are built up, and it can take years before something will pierce through in order for them to finally find their “belonging” and their “home” within themselves.

I have struggled immensely in many of these areas. I am 46 years old now and with each year that passes, I sense that the struggles are, perhaps, a little less intense. I am humbled by the gifts that have been granted in other areas of my life that have enabled me to compensate for the losses. I have also been able to understand that having gone through the pain of loss has somehow brought me closer to a deeper spiritual realization. It is truly the only reality that really matters. I pray often for the grace to be able to care and love others and to worry less about myself.

I am also deeply thankful for my family. The acceptance and love I receive from them are indescribable! The innocent and very generous love from my children often astounds me and leave me in a state of awe. What a gift!

Please keep these children from Eldorado, Texas in your thoughts and in your prayers. If you are inclined to help in some small way, here and here are sites that will give you more information.

April 16th 2008

Beauty Is Truth

Beauty is truth, truth is beauty, that is all ye know on earth, and all ye need to know. ~John Keats (1819)

What is truth? Where is truth to be found? How do we go about finding truth? What is beauty? Who can make the assumption to label something “beautiful”? These are questions that will haunt an individual that desires to understands the meaning of “truth” to its fullest.

Truth is fact and yet the truest and purest form of truth is something that cannot be measured. It is beyond our knowing and beyond our understanding. Time and again we see that something has been discovered or invented, only to find out a short while later that it has become obsolete because even greater truths have been found and better inventions have been made.

The search for truth is a continual cycle of growth - expanding far beyond what it started out to be. One of the most dangerous things a human being can do is to become arrogantly certain of their “knowledge”… no matter what field they are in. In one blink of a moment that knowledge can prove to be false, incomplete and vastly limited. The greatness of a human being is not in what he knows but in who he becomes. The human mind is astonishing and yet most of us only use such a minute part of it, never understanding its full capacity. Feel free to watch this amazing clip, as well as this short clip.

One of the silliest things we can do, in my opinion, is to make sweeping and unequivocal statements about who God is, what one should believe and how one should worship. Some religions and denominations have damaged so many people because of their harshness, condemnations and their insistence on strict adherence to man-made rules and regulations and ideologies. In many instances, love plays little or no part in the “business of church,” and “religion”. Yet, it stands firm and true that love still remains and always will remain the most powerful force to effectively and permanently change the heart of a human being.

God is beauty and truth in absolute perfection. As a kaleidoscope, each tiny twist reveals yet new dimensions, new profundity of expressions and new shapes and colors of beauty and truth. So it is with Deity. No matter how one desires to do so, God cannot and will never be able to be explained. The closer that one comes to the light of truth, the more it is realized, it is of a certainty that He/She/It, is nothing at all like what one had previously thought. His multi-faceted and multi-dimensional being is beyond our human comprehension and it is in that realization where absolute truth and beauty are found.

Each person can find beauty in their own, very intimate and personal journey.

One might find beauty in the wings of a butterfly or the fluttering of a hummingbird. Another might find it in the strokes of a great painter or the form of an exquisite sculpture. One might find their beauty in the absolute harmony of musical notes orchestrated to perfection and the graceful dance of a ballerina, while another finds it in the dimensions of architecture or the words and lyrics of poetry and songs. Then there are those who embrace beauty in the simplicity of nature with its array of colors in landscapes, flowers, mountains, and the seas. Certain personalities will even embrace a new culture which is different from his own. He admires their simpler way of life and strives to understand it…as well as himself.

However one meets beauty matters only when it is certain that the encounter of beauty has enriched their reality of truth. Embracing that which deeply speaks to us will often pierce through this linear world of ours and touch the world of the unknown. It grabs ahold of our hearts and with certainty we can know that life is still fuller, still greater than ourselves and our, so very limited, views.

When a human being truly encounters beauty and truth, it will prove to be a mystical and deeply spiritual experience for them, far removed from what so many call “religion.”

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