Description
Viktor Frankl, writing from the concentration camps of World War II, identified meaning-making as the most fundamental human freedom — the one that cannot be taken away even in extreme circumstances. Post-traumatic growth research has validated this insight repeatedly: the factor most predictive of genuine recovery and growth after devastating experience is not the nature of the event but the quality of the meaning-making that follows. The Meaning Map is a practical guide to developing exactly that capacity.
The book works through four dimensions of meaning that research identifies as most important for wellbeing: purpose (having a sense of direction and something worth moving toward), comprehension (a coherent, honest narrative about what happened), mattering (the sense that your existence is significant to something beyond yourself), and belonging (the experience of being genuinely known and valued by others). Each dimension is explored in depth with practices for developing it when major change has disrupted it.
A particularly powerful section addresses what the author calls “meaning ruptures” — the specific moments in the aftermath of loss when meaning structures suddenly fail: the morning you wake up and don’t know what you’re getting up for; the moment you realise the future you had planned no longer exists. For each of these moments, the book offers both a normalising framework and specific, practical responses.
The book closes with a guide to constructing a “provisional meaning map” — not a definitive answer to questions of purpose, but a working document that gives you enough direction to move forward while remaining honestly open to the uncertainty of genuine life change.





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