 everything can be taken from a man except his freedom to choose his attitude in the face of any given circumstances. Also, Victor Frankl said in his Book of Man's Search for Meaning about the use of paint in a Nazi concentration camp. Arguably, though, Frankl had no freedoms there. Did he really? No basic freedoms he couldn't decide when to get up, when to go to bed, where to live, what to do for a living? So what he's saying, I suppose, to us, which is a good reminder for us all, is that freedom isn't the absence of constraints. Freedom is the choice to choose your relationship to your givens, to your givens in your circumstances on any given day. Freedom is about what you do with what life has done is doing to you. I suppose is the lesson that he's passing on to us. It's not an easy lesson, is it? We've all got things in our lives that we want to change, can't change often. But what we can change is the meaning we attribute to it, our relationship with our given circumstances and, therefore, how that affects us on any given day. I've sent him much love to you all, but that leaves all your freedoms in that way today.