CONCEPT
Executive Neurosis
Frankl's diagnosis of the depression afflicting
highly successful professionals who have achieved everything the market values yet feel
profound emptiness—success without meaning.
Executive neurosis is the condition of the person who has climbed every rung of the ladder, achieved every marker of success, accumulated wealth and status and the admiration of peers—and feels nothing. The external life is successful by every measurable criterion; the internal life is hollow. Frankl observed this pattern in corporate executives, senior professionals, and high-achieving individuals who sought therapy not for any specific symptom but for a pervasive sense of meaninglessness that their success had not resolved and in some cases had intensified. The neurosis revealed that the production model's definition of success (income, status, achievement) was orthogonal to the existential definition of meaning (purpose, self-transcendence, the sense that one's existence serves something beyond itself).
In The You On AI Field Guide
Frankl developed the concept through clinical observation in postwar Vienna and later in his American lecture tours, where he encountered the paradox repeatedly: patients whose external circumstances were enviable (successful careers, financial security, social prestige) experiencing internal conditions indistinguishable from those whose circumstances were desperate. The therapeutic mystery was