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Feel Better, Live More with Dr Rangan Chatterjee

#144 Auschwitz Survivor Dr Edith Eger on How to Discover Your Inner Power

Feel Better, Live More with Dr Rangan Chatterjee

Dr Rangan Chatterjee

Health & Fitness, Medicine, Alternative Health, Mental Health

4.810.9K Ratings

🗓️ 1 January 2021

⏱️ 98 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Today’s conversation will stop you in your tracks. It’s powerful, confronting and challenging and I am so grateful for my guest’s honesty, empathy and willingness to share the wisdom of her 93 years. Dr Edith Eger is a Holocaust survivor, psychologist and expert in the treatment of post-traumatic stress but above all, she’s an incredible human being with an extraordinary story to share. Her latest book, The Gift: 12 Lessons to Save Your Life, is quite simply a phenomenal read and in my view a must-read for all of us.


As a Jew living in Eastern Europe under Nazi occupation, Edith was taken to Auschwitz concentration camp with her parents and sister, at the age of 16. She explains how she found her inner resources, how she came to view her guards as the real prisoners, turn hate into pity and, incredibly, she even describes her horrific experience as ‘an opportunity’. She has liberated herself from the prison of her past through forgiveness.


I’m acutely aware that for many of us listening, myself included, it’s hard to put our own problems alongside anything Edith has faced. Which makes her teaching that, ‘There’s no hierarchy in trauma’ all the more beautiful. Edith is not here to make us put our own suffering into perspective and overcome it. Rather, she explains, we can learn to come to terms with pain, reframe it and become stronger.


We cover so many different topics in this conversation, from parenting and relationship wisdom to insights on semantics and depression. Edith’s message to us is that we can change the thoughts and behaviours that are keeping us imprisoned in the past. I felt grateful and humbled to have had the opportunity to speak to Edith and the conversation really changed me. I hope you get as much out of it as I did.


Show notes available at https://drchatterjee.com/144


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DISCLAIMER: The content in the podcast and on this webpage is not intended to constitute or be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your doctor or other qualified health care provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay in seeking it because of something you have heard on the podcast or on my website. 



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Transcript

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0:00.0

Change is synonymous with growth, some hoping that people can find some positive way to make a decision

0:11.8

that life is not from outside in. I have discovered my inner resources in Auschwitz

0:20.2

that I was able to decide that they were the prisoners, not me,

0:27.2

and they could never murder my spirit. Auschwitz was an opportunity,

0:33.4

for an opportunity to discover my power within me that no Nazi could take away for touch.

0:44.3

So it's not what happens, it's what you do within.

0:47.8

Hi, my name is Rongan Chastigy, welcome to Feel Better Live More.

0:59.2

Hello, welcome to 2021, welcome to my podcast. This is the New Year's Day episode,

1:07.0

which is becoming a little bit of an annual tradition. Last year you may recall,

1:12.3

I will lease the incredible story of the former armed robber, John McAvoy, to help get you

1:19.0

in the right frame of mind for the year ahead. And this year's New Year's Day conversation

1:24.6

is just as powerful a way to start your new year. In fact, it may even surpass John's story,

1:31.5

and not that this is in any way a competition. Now, it's a conversation I had a few weeks back,

1:38.3

and it's one that's likely to stop you in your tracks. It's powerful, it's confronting,

1:43.4

it's challenging, and I feel so grateful to my guest for her honesty, empathy, and willingness

1:49.5

to share the wisdom of her 93 years on this planet. Dr. Edith Eager is a holocaust survivor.

1:57.8

She's a psychologist and expert in the treatments of post-traumatic stress,

2:02.1

but above all, she's just an incredible human being with an extraordinary story to share.

2:09.0

Her latest book, The Gift, 12 Lessons to Save Your Life, is quite simply a phenomenal read,

2:17.1

and in my view, a must read for all of us. Edith grew up in Eastern Europe, and at the age of 16,

2:23.9

when she was living under Nazi occupation without any warning one day, she was taken to Auschwitz

2:31.5

concentration camp, along with her parents and her sister. As she explains how she managed to

...

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