Viktor Frankl's insight that meaning is not found but made — that in the wake of devastating loss, the question is not what the world can still give you but what you can still give — has been applied to grief in ways his own writing only began to develop. This domain examines how meaning-making works in the grief context, what conditions support it, and how the traditions frame the task of rebuilding a life worth living after the worst has happened.
Each step builds on the last.