What is a dissonant chord? It is a musical chord (two or more notes played simultaneously) that sounds disharmonious and ugly to the ear. It also has the quality of momentarily giving the impression of being out of tune with the rest of the music.
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Learn More »Frankl recites the story of another doctor who entered his office asking for help because of severe depression due to the fact that he had lost his beloved wife two years earlier. Frankl asked him what would have happened if he had instead died before his wife, to which the doctor replied that for his wife this would have been even more terrible to bear. “You see, doctor,” said Frankl, “such a suffering has been spared her, and it was you who have spared her this suffering – to be sure, at the price that now you have to survive and mourn her.” It seems that after this remark, a big weight was lifted from the doctor’s suffering soul, for as Frankl so eloquently says in what is a recurrent theme in his book, “suffering ceases to be suffering at the moment it finds meaning, such as the meaning of a sacrifice.” By helping the doctor see his state from a new vantage point – that of the totality of his life, rather than the narrow perspective of his current personal suffering – the doctor understood that what seemed meaningless and hence discordant in isolation turned out to have had a deeper meaning and harmony in his life as a whole: his suffering was the suffering his wife was being spared! Unless they die simultaneously in an accident, this is the fate of every elderly couple who outlives his or her spouse. When viewed from Frankl’s perspective, every dissonant chord of suffering of every elderly person who has lost a beloved can be similarly resolved via a new understanding that harmonizes the suffering with the totality of one’s life that includes the life (and death) of both oneself and one’s spouse. But what happens when the suffering is not only extreme, but there is also no evidence or any possibility for anything in the universe bringing about any future resolution? How can any good possibly ever come out of, say, being imprisoned for years in a concentration camp, or losing one’s hearing? Suddenly, we realize that such disparate types of suffering cannot be resolved by some later event in physical space, nor by a subsequent reaping of the fruit of personal growth, nor by any new understanding – the three possibilities we have already examined. In other words, what happens when Nature does not provide either the resolution itself or any hints that such a resolution exists? Well, if we stick to the analogy of suffering as being a dissonant chord, we may see this lack of any provided resolution as a challenge to create the resolution ourselves! Rather than passively waiting for Life itself to provide the harmonizing notes, we create them. The dissonant chord of suffering can then be considered as “a given chord” that Life asks us to subsequently harmonize with our life through our own actions. So our suffering ceases to be a one-of-a-kind static entity and becomes a dynamic potentiality whose final true nature and meaning in our life and Life in general is dependent upon us. By struggling to incorporate the dissonant chord of suffering into the totality of our life, in effect we become the composers of a new life in which this chord ceases to be disharmonious. Therefore, when you are imprisoned in a concentration camp, as Victor Frankl was, you may choose to transmute the suffering into something beautiful, consonant, harmonious – just as Frankl did when he allowed his suffering to become the inspiration for creating his philosophy of meaning, for founding a new school of psychotherapy called Logotherapy, and for writing one of the greatest books of the twentieth century. And when you lose your hearing, you may think of Beethoven, who, while he started to lose his hearing in his early twenties, eventually triumphed over it by using it as the oil that fired his inspiration and creativity. The music Beethoven could not hear with his ears became the music he struggled to hear in his mind and the music which would in great part end up expressing this very struggle: His Fifth Symphony is the literal harmonization in musical language itself of his life’s dissonant chord of suffering, his deafness – the symphony’s four opening notes that are repeated throughout the first movement are said to express the relentless poundings of a merciless Fate. Therefore, in the unique case of Beethoven, we have a suffering that led to a double harmony: He harmonized his life’s suffering by subsequent work (action) that transcended it, and this selfsame work simultaneously expressed the struggle towards this transcendence in “the harmonies” of musical language! The greatest dissonant chord in Beethoven’s life, his extreme affliction, led to his transforming himself, his life, and all Life (in this case the music of mankind) into something beautiful and even glorious, and thereby becoming one of the greatest men in history. But of course, the pinnacle of all life-examples of the dissonant chord of suffering becoming a harmonious part of a new life that is molded through personal action is the West’s most important figure, Jesus Christ, whose Passion became the condition for his Glory. The final “composition” of Jesus’s exemplary and inspiring life lies in the extreme dissonance of an unspeakable Passion being simultaneously harmonized by an extreme act of love and forgiveness for his tormentors – an act that gave the suffering a higher meaning. It is the resultant harmonious sequence and blending of the two opposing chords that led to the supreme consummation and glory of Jesus’s life. Contemporary exemplary figures who have managed to convert extreme adversity and suffering into a great life by virtue of their adversity include Martin Luther King, Nelson Mandela, and the Dalai Lama.
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Read More »Viewing even extreme suffering as a dissonant chord rather than as some anomaly in an impersonal universe helps us discover ways to transmute it into a newly created personal universe in which the discord is resolved by and through our own actions. Just as we transform the matter and energy of the cosmos by channeling them into the myriad forms of everything we create as humanity, we may transform our sufferings, the dissonant chords of our life, into something consonant, thereby creating a unique composition of a creative life that has never before appeared in the universe. By transposing “the problem of suffering” into “a problem of harmony,” it ceases to be a meaningless cruelty, a dark mystery, an inexplicable intrusion upon the Creation. The problem of suffering then ends up becoming none other than the way we harmonize suffering with the rest of our life. Suffering then may be viewed as simply one element of the overall harmony of the cosmos – albeit having initially seemed out of place and discordant. Taking the analogy of the dissonant chord to its culmination, we need only make one further step that will allow us to accept the non-negative function of suffering in our life, and in some sense even “explain it away”: We can consider suffering to be not only an indispensable part of the Becoming’s own process, but a constituent element of the Becoming’s overall harmonious composition.
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