The truth of life is progressive.
People always talk about finding the meaning of life, but in fact, what they are looking for is the experience of life.
When we talk about how life is terrible and we don't know why we should do anything, it seems like everything is meaningless. Perhaps we can follow Frankl's example and rephrase the question. Instead of asking, "What can life give me?" we should ask, "What can I create for life?"
Imagine when a person keeps asking, "What can life give me?" their state of life is like a beggar constantly begging with both hands, unable to see what they already have, only hoping that others can give them something.
But when we stop asking, "What can life give me?" and start asking, "What can I create for life?" the initiative returns to our own hands. No matter what difficulties we face, we have the ability to create something for life.
So when we encounter problems and challenges, we should think about what life wants from us instead of thinking about what we want. Life gives us these challenges to create something from us.
In your life, you create the meaning. You experience and create it by opening your heart and immersing yourself in life. If you give this right to someone else to control, you lose your freedom.
Meaning is summarized through experience, and meaning accompanies experience. When you feel that something has meaning, you will believe it is the truth. But as time passes, meaning continuously changes, and so does the truth.
Hopefully, we will never find the answer
At the same time, we should keep exploring...
The mind always wants to find a unique answer
Life is bigger than the answer.
Life is not a problem to be solved;
it is a mystery unfolding.