Not long ago I was browsing in a store when I heard someone
say, “Dr. Molly!” It was a client whose
cat had recently been euthanized, and she told me that she was still
heartbroken. She lives alone, and that
kitty had been her constant companion. She then went on to tell me that she
would never get another cat again. Losing a pet was too painful.
About
seven years ago I was diagnosed with a chronic disease, and that sent me on a
quest to make sense of it all. My research led me to read Victor Frankl’s
famous book “Man’s Search for Meaning.” Frankl was a Jewish psychiatrist who
was sent to four different concentration camps during World War II. His
suffering there was unimaginable. The odds of his survival in the camps were
one in 28, but survive he did. His profound book isn’t about just his torment
at the camps, but also his insight as to what makes life meaningful.
I recently reread his book and realized how well it related
to my observations as a veterinarian.
Frankl said that we can discover meaning in life in three
ways:
- By creating a work or doing a deed.
- By experiencing something or encountering someone.
- By the attitude we take toward unavoidable suffering.
The third way is by finding meaning in suffering. Frankl
suggested that we can find meaning in life even when confronted with a hopeless
situation. It challenges us to change ourselves. “In some ways,” he wrote, “suffering
ceases to be suffering at the moment it finds a meaning.”
The suffering after the death of a beloved pet caused my
client to reject the thought of getting another cat. According to Victor
Frankl, we would need to find meaning from such an event in order to transcend
our anguish. What could possibly be meaningful about losing a beloved
companion?
Victor Frankl contended that we may find meaning in life
when facing a situation, such as death, that cannot be changed. He believed
that when we suffer the death of a loved one, we “bear witness to the uniquely
human potential at its best, which is to transform a personal tragedy into a
triumph, to turn one’s predicament into a human achievement.” He felt that we should suffer bravely, and he
considered that to be ennobling. Being
imprisoned for four years allowed him that unique perspective.
Through suffering the loss of a pet, we survive and learn to
cope. If you could see that as an ennobling achievement, as Victor Frankl did, it
would allow you to move on. Fear of loss would not deprive you of what could be
many more years of giving and receiving the love of a pet. And that will add to
the richness and meaning of your life.
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