When people are in an extremely harsh environment for a long time, all values are destroyed and always shrouded in the shadow of death. What will happen to people's psychology under high pressure? Is there any point in this miserable and hopeless life? As a survivor of the concentration camp in World War II, Austrian psychologist frankl tells the profound influence of that extreme environment on the psychological state of ordinary prisoners in his autobiography, Finding the Meaning of Life, and the cruel struggle for existence conducted by prisoners for the survival of themselves and their friends. As a keen observer and witness, he further leads to a serious topic from these painful and real experiences-where is the meaning of our life? In other words, what are we living for?
In the concentration camp, prisoners are deprived of all their property and rights, not only hungry and cold, but also may die at any time. Prisoners who are judged to be weak and sick will soon enter the gas chamber, where life is particularly small and fragile. But according to frankl's observation, people who are not so strong but have rich mental activities seem to be more likely to survive, and he himself is an example. Miss and love for his wife, let him clearly outline his wife's appearance in his mind, and laugh and laugh with her, vividly. Love transcends the barriers of time and space and even life and death, and brings inner enrichment and strong support to those who have love. "Put me in your heart like a seal, and love will be as strong as death."