How To Find Meaning After Unimaginable Pain | Edith Eger

如何在无法想象的痛苦之后寻找意义 | 爱迪丝·艾格

The Daily Motivation

2026-05-08

8 分钟
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Leave an Amazon Rating or Review for my New York Times Bestselling book, Make Money Easy! Check out the full episode: https://greatness.lnk.to/1922DM Edith Eger doesn't believe in "overcoming" trauma. She calls hers a cherished wound. Something she learned, as she puts it, in the classroom of Auschwitz. She tells the story of two Vietnam veterans. Same injuries. Same diagnosis. Same prognosis. One was curled in a fetal position, asking why. The other told her he was grateful to be in a wheelchair because he could reach his children closer. Same body. Entirely different life. The only difference was meaning. What hit hardest: Edith had her degree, her white coat, her patients, and still felt like an imposter. She hadn't done her own work. So she went back to Auschwitz. Alone. Her sister said she was an idiot. She calls it reliving so you can revise. Not going back. A new beginning. Sign up for the Greatness newsletter: http://www.greatness.com/newsletter Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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  • Hi, my name is Lewis Howes and welcome to the Daily Motivation Show.

  • Seven grandsons.

  • I think are the two twins, the two-year-olds, are those the youngest grandsons you have?

  • The youngest, yeah.

  • So there's 93 years-ish between you and your youngest grandsons.

  • I'm curious, what is the, you know, they.

  • At this moment, they don't know the type of life you've had, right?

  • Not until they 're a little older will they understand the stories and hear the stories about your whole experience

  • from what their great-grandmother went through and how you overcame so many challenges and obstacles

  • and how you became a member of society for hope and inspiration.

  • I'm curious if you could share three lessons with them to set them up for their life.

  • What would those three lessons be?

  • I probably would tell them that I will never forget what happened.

  • I don't know what it means to overcome.