DWQA QuestionsCategory: MetaphysicsToday’s questions for Creator were taken from Psychiatrist Viktor Frankl’s transcendent account of his time in a Nazi concentration camp, his book, Man’s Search for Meaning. Frankl was already a successful psychiatrist when he entered the camps as a captured Jew. He was to later learn that his entire family died in the camps and he emerged the sole survivor. He endured great suffering. But while it’s safe to assume that he was resolving personal karma through this incredible trial and travail, he also approached the experience as an opportunity, a “divine mission” to put it plainly. To study evil up close and personal, to learn all he could, and to try and find a means by which it might be conquered. What is Creator’s perspective and what was the mix of karma and mission life that Frankl navigated?
Nicola Staff asked 2 years ago
His karma was much like yours and everyone else’s in the human plane. He was on a mission life, but all of you are on mission lives of sorts to help yourselves and others to do the best you can to raise yourself up and contribute something to the betterment of humanity, to solve the problem of evil. No one comes to the Earth for an incarnation unless they are a lightworker, or a recovering lightworker who may have fallen behind through corruption and having endured too many woundings to keep them diminished, but then they will return to work on that negative karma to restore themselves so they can once again become more effective as a lightworker to deal with the problem of evil. So we view this entire series of questions and Viktor Frankl’s life itself as an iconic example of the divine human in action, showing up, taking their lumps, so to speak, by putting themselves in harm’s way but for a greater good. Viktor Frankl’s role was to be an observer, an experiencer, and an originator of a powerful testimony about evil at work and the contrast in comparing that to humans and who they truly are when they get love going within and are touched by the divine. When you read an account of his experiences in the death camps, you are, in essence, looking in the mirror at yourselves. Most people are in the dark and do not realize they are in peril, but you knew that before you came down and you may well learn that before you leave. This is why today’s discussion is so imperative—more must be awakened to the plight of humanity and the reasons behind it, for you, collectively, are the key to turning things around.