Abstract

Background: Searching for the meaning of human existence is man’s fundamental orientation. People are free to find meaning in their lives, and while they are not always free to choose the conditions of life, they are free to choose their attitude toward the conditions in which they find themselves. When people experience an unchangeable situation, the most important thing is the attitude they take toward it. This study aimed to identify the sense of meaning in life among elite athletes after a spinal cord injury (SCI) and to analyze the different aspects contributing to this domain. Methods: The study involved five athletes with at least national-level achievements in sports prior to a SCI. The study consisted of an interview using a communicator and filling out two online questionnaires—a personal questionnaire and the Purpose in Life Scale. Results: Analyzing the quantitative results, four participants achieved results indicating a high sense of meaning in life, while one participant achieved a significantly lower result. Conclusions: What affects one’s purpose in life is not so much the objective physical limitation but how much physicality one perceives to have lost as a result of the injury. Elite athletes stay involved in the sporting environment, which prevents the loss of purpose and maintains a sense of meaning at a high level. Both telling the story of your own illness and listening to the stories of others help the process of self-healing.

Highlights

  • Viktor Frankl is considered to be the only medical expert to have presented a scientifically and empirically based concept of human’s search for meaning and existence, as well as putting existential questions at the core of his practice [1]

  • Analyzing the quantitative results of the purpose in life test, four participants achieved results indicating a high sense of meaning in life (PILS between 106 and 135 points), and one participant significantly lower (PILS = 67)

  • R4, despite a better functional condition than the others, felt its disability and limitations more significantly than the others due to severe pain and depressive personality. This indicates that not an objective physical limitation but how much physicality one perceives to have lost as a result of the injury affects purpose in life and each person decides what makes his or her life meaningful

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Summary

Introduction

Viktor Frankl is considered to be the only medical expert to have presented a scientifically and empirically based concept of human’s search for meaning and existence, as well as putting existential questions at the core of his practice [1]. According to Frankl (2006), human beings’ fundamental orientation, taking precedence over all other life projects, is searching for the meaning of human existence, called “the will to meaning” [2]. Frankl was the creator of logotherapy, the aim of which, he claimed, is to allow the individual to move beyond limitations and achieve fulfillment [6]. From his experiences in a concentration camp during World War II, he observed that life has meaning under all conditions and that it is psychologically damaging when a person’s search for meaning is blocked [7]

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