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We would like to talk about suffering, seeking meaning in life, and other cumulative degrees that have become an abstract background for the creation of real abundance in human life.

How do we see the “suffering” of our life, mostly we take it as an extra carriage with heavyweight that has the potential to shrink us in the whirl of negative thoughts but do we exactly percept this way?

In this book, you are going to witness some great sufferings which show how trivial matters we deal with and get easily shattered. We shift our balance towards it and pity on our suffering.

Suffering is an indispensable part of life. We have to learn about how to not create false hopes, expectations, and whatever we deadly rely on.

As Dostoevski said once, “There is only one thing that I dread: Not to be worthy of my sufferings”.

Certain emotions cultivate infringing games for pertaining our core responsibilities as a burden.

This book has promising aspects of learning that can beat 100 self-help books. It opens the door to accept your suffering, as it is.

Loved Frankl’s way of looking towards life even when he had experienced cruelty and abyss of life in Auschwitz concentration camp to several others.

Narration is so eloquent and gripping that one can finish this entire book in a single sitting. Though, would recommend you to read at your own pace because there are great life learnings.

You can’t relate your suffering to theirs or anyone on this planet. Every person has their own turmoil.

Logotherapy has been discussed in nutshell is quite capable to teach you how to look on your blue days;

👉Have a task to live by.
👉 Paradoxical intention of therapy, though it’s not a panacea for all neurosis.
👉State of happiness; and lots of other virtues that push us deliberately towards accepting incidents.

One thing that has touched us is that when you take life incidents as its part or event then you are going to “live” it.

Nietzsche’s word, “He who has a WHY to live for can bear with almost any HOW.”

Man’s Search For Meaning by Viktor Frankl

₹145.00Price
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