Wait, More Women Have Accused Eric Swalwell of Sexual Misconduct?
OpenAI Faces Investigation Over Allegations That ChatGPT Helped Mass Shooter Kill Two Peop...
It’s ‘Shoot the Messenger Week’ As Jen Psaki Slams Local Media Holding a...
Do The Podcaster's Even Matter? New Polling Suggests That They Don't
US Oil & Gas Just Totally Embarrassed CA Dem Tom Steyer After He...
Victory Over Death
DOJ Reaches Settlement in Landmark Case Over Biden-Era Government Censorship of Americans
Chinese Researcher Sentenced to Prison for Smuggling E. coli DNA into U.S.
Welcome Home: Artemis II Astronauts Return After Historic Moon Orbit
Trump: 'No Nuclear Weapon' Is 99 Percent of Iran Deal Talks
Disgruntled Worker Charged with Arson After Allegedly Burning Down $500M Warehouse Over Pa...
Ex-Staffer Says That Rep. Eric Swalwell Sexually Assaulted Her
'Ketamine Queen' Gets 15 Years in Prison After Supplying Ketamine Linked to Matthew...
Democrat Politician Who Targeted Easter Churchgoers Also Attacked July Fourth Celebrants
Why America Leads the World in Innovation
OPINION

The power of perceptions: Imagining the reality you want

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
The power of perceptions: Imagining the reality you want

Viktor Frankl was a Jewish psychiatrist who spent three years during World War II living under unspeakable circumstances in several of the most notorious Nazi concentration camps.

Advertisement

While imprisoned, Frankl realized he had one single freedom left: He had the power to determine his response to the horror unfolding around him.

And so he chose to imagine.

He imagined his wife and the prospect of seeing her again. He imagined himself teaching students after the war about the lessons he had learned.

Frankl survived and went on to chronicle his experiences and the wisdom he had drawn from them.

"A human being is a deciding being," he wrote in his 1946 book, "Man's Search for Meaning," which sold more than 10 million copies. "Between stimulus and response there is a space. In that space is our power to choose our response. In our response lies our growth and our freedom."

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement