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experiencelifemag.com
Print › | Back ›
What Life Expects of Us
When I travel outside the country, I am regularly reminded of how many people
are struggling with immense problems and living in great need, without
basic
necessities like food, shelter and freedom. I am also reminded,
at these
times, by how blessed many of us are to be facing lesser
struggles.
By Bahram Akradi |
March 2004 |
Difficult jobs, difficult people, minor health challenges, our budgets, our
doubts and mixed emotions — these things may not be easy or comfortable, but by
comparison, they seem fairly manageable. Very often, in my experience, these
challenges turn out to be gifts, opportunities to hone ourselves and our
perceptions in ways that make us stronger and more compassionate. I believe that
we have an obligation to face these problems with as much integrity as we
can muster, because in many cases, by improving our own personal integrity
we wind up lightening the burdens of others and improving the world around
us in surprising ways.
Integrity, of course, is not a nicety to be pulled
out only in times of personal convenience and abundance. It is in difficult
times that our integrity becomes even more essential, and perhaps more precious.
On the last page of this magazine, there is a quote by Victor Frankl, a
celebrated philosopher and Holocaust survivor. Frankl observed that within the
horror of the concentration camps, there were many people who went mad or numb,
others who became monsters, and still others who transcended their
environments with acts of quiet heroism. Among this last group were people who
consistently gave up what little they had to feed others, who took pains to
offer others comfort, or who composed beautiful music in their heads even in
the midst of unspeakable violence and despair. These were the people who
consciously chose to wield their “last of human freedoms” — the power to choose
how they would react, mentally and emotionally, even in a dehumanizing and
apparently hopeless environment.
Frankl’s observations, chronicled in his
classic book, Man’s Search for Meaning (Simon and Schuster, 1963), send an
incredibly powerful message, one that has inspired countless individuals to do
and be their best in times when it would have been been far easier not to. The
thing is, these are not always life and death situations. In fact, we get the
vast majority of our “integrity opportunities” in small, mundane circumstances:
the projects we lead, the commitments we make, the level of honesty we are
willing to uphold. All these things define us. They determine the way we touch
life, and whether that touch supports or disturbs the things we most
value.
Regardless of what we might want to be known for in our youth, as we
age, most of us care increasingly about being known for our personal integrity.
This is, in part, because we have had the opportunity to observe the importance
of integrity as a guiding principle. We’ve come to see how its presence or
absence in every part of our lives directly impacts the quality of our lives.
We’ve come to know what it means to have trustworthy friends and false ones; to
work with people who are good to their word, and those who aren’t. We’ve
seen what miracles can be accomplished by those who are committed to offering
the world their best, and we’ve seen how much damage can be justified by those
who — in the name of fear, greed and resentment — feel entitled to do their
worst.
In Man’s Search for Meaning, Frankl writes: “It did not really matter
what we expected from life, but rather what life expected from us. We needed to
stop asking about the meaning of life, and instead to think of ourselves as
those who were being questioned by life — daily and hourly. Our answer must
consist, not in talk and meditation, but in right action and in right conduct.
Life ultimately means taking the responsibility to find the right answer to its
problems and to fulfill the tasks which it constantly sets for each individual.”
Whatever personal challenges and tasks life has set for you, it is my hope
that you find something in this issue of Experience Life that inspires you to
rise and face them with conviction.
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What Life Expects of Us
When I travel outside the country, I am regularly reminded of how many people
are struggling with immense problems and living in great need, without
basic
necessities like food, shelter and freedom. I am also reminded,
at these
times, by how blessed many of us are to be facing lesser
struggles.
By Bahram Akradi | Letter From the Founder, March 2004 |
Difficult jobs, difficult people, minor health challenges, our budgets, our
doubts and mixed emotions — these things may not be easy or comfortable, but by
comparison, they seem fairly manageable. Very often, in my experience, these
challenges turn out to be gifts, opportunities to hone ourselves and our
perceptions in ways that make us stronger and more compassionate. I believe that
we have an obligation to face these problems with as much integrity as we
can muster, because in many cases, by improving our own personal integrity
we wind up lightening the burdens of others and improving the world around
us in surprising ways.
Integrity, of course, is not a nicety to be pulled
out only in times of personal convenience and abundance. It is in difficult
times that our integrity becomes even more essential, and perhaps more precious.
On the last page of this magazine, there is a quote by Victor Frankl, a
celebrated philosopher and Holocaust survivor. Frankl observed that within the
horror of the concentration camps, there were many people who went mad or numb,
others who became monsters, and still others who transcended their
environments with acts of quiet heroism. Among this last group were people who
consistently gave up what little they had to feed others, who took pains to
offer others comfort, or who composed beautiful music in their heads even in
the midst of unspeakable violence and despair. These were the people who
consciously chose to wield their “last of human freedoms” — the power to choose
how they would react, mentally and emotionally, even in a dehumanizing and
apparently hopeless environment.
Frankl’s observations, chronicled in his
classic book, Man’s Search for Meaning (Simon and Schuster, 1963), send an
incredibly powerful message, one that has inspired countless individuals to do
and be their best in times when it would have been been far easier not to. The
thing is, these are not always life and death situations. In fact, we get the
vast majority of our “integrity opportunities” in small, mundane circumstances:
the projects we lead, the commitments we make, the level of honesty we are
willing to uphold. All these things define us. They determine the way we touch
life, and whether that touch supports or disturbs the things we most
value.
Regardless of what we might want to be known for in our youth, as we
age, most of us care increasingly about being known for our personal integrity.
This is, in part, because we have had the opportunity to observe the importance
of integrity as a guiding principle. We’ve come to see how its presence or
absence in every part of our lives directly impacts the quality of our lives.
We’ve come to know what it means to have trustworthy friends and false ones; to
work with people who are good to their word, and those who aren’t. We’ve
seen what miracles can be accomplished by those who are committed to offering
the world their best, and we’ve seen how much damage can be justified by those
who — in the name of fear, greed and resentment — feel entitled to do their
worst.
In Man’s Search for Meaning, Frankl writes: “It did not really matter
what we expected from life, but rather what life expected from us. We needed to
stop asking about the meaning of life, and instead to think of ourselves as
those who were being questioned by life — daily and hourly. Our answer must
consist, not in talk and meditation, but in right action and in right conduct.
Life ultimately means taking the responsibility to find the right answer to its
problems and to fulfill the tasks which it constantly sets for each individual.”
Whatever personal challenges and tasks life has set for you, it is my hope
that you find something in this issue of Experience Life that inspires you to
rise and face them with conviction.
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