" In former days, people frustrated in their will to meaning
would probably have turned to a pastor, priest, or rabbi. Today, they crowd clinics and offices. The psychiatrist, then, frequently finds himself in an embarrassing situation; he now is confronted with human problems rather than with
specific clinical symptoms. Man's search for a meaning is not pathological, but rather the surest sign of being truly human. Even if this search is frustrated, it cannot be considered a sign of disease. It is spiritual distress, not mental disease. "
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- 2006-04-09 @ 20:00:00
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- 2006-04-10 @ 14:09:41
Hello !
Thanks for your's nice comment.
I like to quote some indian people in my blogs, such : Mahatma Gandhi, Rabindranath Tagore, Jiddu Krishnamurti.
Good-bye ! Norberto
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- 2006-04-10 @ 17:22:43
Surely!
...and even Osho, Buddha, Nehru are worth referencing ad quoting to support hypotheses
varshakale
Yes I agree with you. Religion and spiritualism are thrived on the psychological needs of the people. Though psychotherapy and other sciences are able to address many of the problems still there are certain other psychological needs whcich are yet to be fulfilled by them. Hence time and again spiritual and religious waves will keep coming and going untill and unless we discover the whole depth of human mind.