The third stage is when the camp was showing liberation of an experience of depersonalization. To the camp inmates, everything seemed unreal and because of that they were showing no emotions. Logotherapy plays apart in the third stage of the book because it tries to help individuals realize there is a meaning to live.
Frankl was a prisoner in a Nazi concentration camp during World War II, he witnessed terror and torment of the inmates every waken day he was their. He observed those prisoners who allowed themselves to be overwhelmed by despair, who gave up their freedom to choose, often descended into paralytic apathy and depression. Furthermore, he believed that the key to helping people that are in a state of hopelessness is to help them find meaning even in the face of the unthinkable horrors of the concentration camps. .
I think Frankl and the inmates that got through the concentration camps by thinking or holding pleasant memories in their minds and tried to block out the horror of the camps. In other words, individuals will not understand the meaning of his suffering if he or she loses the power to understand what the future holds. One can see how easy it is to lose hope or give up if the means of suffering is not worthy of the suffering. According to Frankl, man's deepest desire is to search for meaning and purpose. "To choose one's own attitude in any given set of circumstances, to choose one's own way" and that is exactly what Frankl did.
Frankl mentioned that every camp member lost their luxuries of a house and money, but all they wanted back was their freedom, family, or life with out pain or pleasure. He says that there is no equilibrium in life that gives us an easy way to live life. Instead there are constant sufferings that we have to triumph through to achieve our goal. There are many struggles that challenges us to become stronger when faced with negative events.