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A powerful source of meaning is creating work that requires your unique skills. Viktor Frankl viewed his life's work, a manuscript, as a "mental child." Focusing on recreating and nurturing this project gave him a profound purpose that helped him survive extreme hardship. This concept applies to any creative or professional project you are passionate about bringing to life.
Stop searching for your purpose as if it's a hidden object. Instead, create it. Ask 'why' you do something and build an empowering vision around it. This created context provides resilience when challenges inevitably arise, reminding you what you're up to.
Purpose isn't a pre-existing truth you find, like an archaeological dig. It's something you actively build, like an architect. You choose an area of interest, invest energy to build skill, and it transforms into a passion through a feedback loop of personal fascination and external validation.
The key to enduring unavoidable hardship isn't to ignore it, but to find meaning in the experience. According to Viktor Frankl, who survived Nazi concentration camps, "suffering ceases to be suffering at the moment it finds a meaning." This attitude transforms personal tragedy from a breaking point into a source of growth, triumph, and resilience.
Tabitha Brown suggests that your uninhibited childhood play, before society imposed limitations, was a pure expression of your calling. Returning to those early memories can help you identify the purpose you were meant to pursue.
This three-part definition clarifies a vague concept. True "life's work" is not just a job; it's a long-term pursuit (lifelong quest), it's service-oriented (for others), and it's deeply authentic (expresses who you are). Few people achieve this, but it's a worthy aspiration.
A meaningful life isn't necessarily a happy or painless one. Meaning is forged through the conscious choice to endure suffering in service of a greater goal or identity, such as parenthood. This act of choosing one's hardship is what imbues life with purpose, a depth that pure stoicism might miss.
Life inevitably involves suffering. According to logotherapy founder Viktor Frankl, the pursuit of meaning is not a luxury but the fundamental requirement that makes suffering bearable. This shifts focus from chasing happiness to crafting a life with a “why” strong enough to endure any “how.”
According to psychiatrist Viktor Frankl, a degree of tension between your current achievements and future aspirations is a key component of well-being. This gap isn't a sign of failure but a necessary, positive drive that creates meaning. Instead of feeling inadequate for not having achieved all your goals, embrace this motivating tension.
Abstract life goals like meaning or a "calling" cannot be pursued directly. Instead, you must identify tangible "proxy goals" that lead you toward them. The key is choosing good proxies based on intrinsic satisfaction, not external validation like money, power, or fame.
The most enduring and interesting creations are those that are an extension of the creator's personality, values, and identity. This alignment makes the work feel less like a job and more like self-expression, providing a source of "abiding joy" that doesn't deplete.