How to overcome the fear of death, loneliness, and take responsibility for your life? Key insights from Irvin Yalom's "Love's Executioner" and practical self-development tools from MriyaRun.
Cure for Illusions: 7 Existential Lessons from Irvin Yalom for Healing Life

Irvin Yalom is a master of existential psychotherapy. His book "Love's Executioner" is a textbook on honesty with oneself. Reading it, we understand that therapy is not a magical conveyor belt. As Yalom himself writes: "Although there is a belief that psychotherapists systematically and skillfully guide their patients... in reality, this happens extremely rarely. Therapists often show indecision, improvise, and blindly search for the right direction".
Here are the main insights from the book, expanded with the author's quotes, which will help rethink responsibility, loneliness, and the fullness of life.
1. Responsibility — The Foundation of Change
No changes are possible without recognizing the authorship of one's own life. Yalom is categorical on this issue: "The most important 1st step during treatment is the patient's admission of their own responsibility for their problems".
As long as a person believes the source of their troubles is external, they are powerless. "The longer a patient believes that all their difficulties are created by some external forces or other people, the less chance there is for the success of therapy". This is a difficult stage, because "fashionable psychotherapists always talk about taking responsibility, but these are just words; in reality, it is very hard, even scary, to realize that you and only you are responsible for your own life".
2. The Price of Choice: Every "Yes" is Someone's "No"
We often delay decisions because we fear loss. But the reality is: "Any decision a person makes requires giving up something; for every 'yes' spoken, one must say at least one 'no'".
This is the law of existential arithmetic: "Every decision takes away opportunities to consider other options". The ability to accept this inevitable loss of alternatives is a sign of adulthood.
3. Relationships as a Shield Against Loneliness
Often what we call "great love" is an escape from anxiety. "One of life's greatest paradoxes is that self-analysis breeds anxiety", while merging with another person eliminates this anxiety.
Yalom warns about the danger of dissolving in a partner: "A person who has fallen in love... is not prone to self-reflection, because their lonely, doubt-ridden 'I' has already become 'We'". In such a state, a person "gets rid of anxiety but loses themselves". True intimacy is destroyed when "instead of establishing connections and caring for someone, the patient uses another person as a shield against their own loneliness".
4. From Intellect to Emotions: How Change Happens
Understanding a problem intellectually is not enough. Yalom admits: "Of course, from the very beginning, I knew that my arguments, however powerful they were, could not radically change anything".
Healing happens on another level: "A person only understands when they begin to realize the truth with their whole being. Only then can they submit to this truth and change". Therapy becomes a powerful force only when "deep emotions are involved".
5. Fear of Death and Unlived Life
One of Yalom's deepest conclusions connects the fear of death with the quality of life. He derived a formula: "Fear of death is always greater in those who feel they are not living a full life".
It works unfailingly: "The less interesting your life is, the fewer opportunities you realize, the greater your fear of death". However, the awareness of finitude is not a sentence, but a stimulus. "Our awareness of death can open up new perspectives on life and prompt us to rethink our priorities".
6. The Nature of Loss: Past and Future
Yalom subtly distinguishes between types of grief. Losing parents is losing the past, as the deceased was "possibly the only witness to past successes". On the other hand, "losing a child is losing the future: such a loss means the loss of a whole life, the destruction of life plans and dreams".
The main advice for healing is simple yet complex: "A person must learn to live with the living before learning to live with the dead".
7. Process is More Important than Content
In communication, not only words matter. Yalom teaches to focus on the "process." "During a conversation, content is the words... process, in turn, is how the content is expressed and especially what the way of expression tells us about the relationship".
The goal of any self-work is not just analyzing the past. As Yalom told his patient: "I want you not to look back and regret anything for the next 5 years starting today. I want the next 5 years to be happy for you".
Life Practice: MriyaRun Tools
Yalom quotes Socrates: "The unexamined life is not worth living". But how to examine it independently, turning dry theory into living experience?
The MriyaRun project offers an ecosystem of tools for deep self-work:
1. Exploring Emotions and "Process"
Yalom emphasizes the importance of emotionally living the truth. To move from thoughts to feelings, use the Emotion Diary (EQ). This is a space for recording not only events but also your reactions to them. Emotion Diary on MriyaRun
2. Working with Boundaries and Responsibility
Taking responsibility for your life is the first step. To stop using others as a shield and build healthy boundaries, use tools for daily reflection. MriyaRun Web Diary Development Tools Catalog
3. Finding Meaning and Working with the Future
The fear of death retreats before a fulfilled life. Metaphoric cards will help you look into the subconscious, find hidden dreams and scenarios ("The Hero's Journey"). This is your tool for dialogue with yourself. Metaphoric Cards (Web Version) MAC Cards "My Myth: The Hero's Journey"
4. Inspiration and Knowledge
Regular reading of deep materials helps keep focus on development. MriyaRun Blog & Articles
Make your life interesting today so you don't fear tomorrow.
Irvin Yalom: The Master of Existential Psychotherapy

Irvin D. Yalom is not just a psychiatrist and psychotherapist; he is a true icon in the world of psychology. He is an emeritus professor of psychiatry at Stanford University, but his global fame comes from his ability to combine profound academic knowledge with engaging fiction.
He is often called the "father of modern existential psychotherapy" and a master of psychological prose.
1. The Four "Givens of Existence" (Existential Fears)
Yalom built his therapeutic model around the idea that human internal conflicts arise from confronting four unavoidable facts of existence. He detailed this in his foundational work, Existential Psychotherapy:
- Death: The most obvious given. The fear of death (conscious or unconscious) underlies many anxieties and defense mechanisms. Living a full life is the only way to cope with the terror of non-being.
- Freedom (and Responsibility): We are the creators of our own lives. The realization that there is no "solid ground" beneath us—only an abyss that we fill with our choices—generates existential anxiety.
- Isolation: No matter how close we get to others, we are born alone and we die alone. This is the "unbridgeable gap" between us and others.
- Meaninglessness: Humans search for meaning in a universe that contains no inherent meaning. Our task is to create this meaning ourselves.
2. The "Here-and-Now" and the Therapist's Role
In contrast to classical psychoanalysis, where the therapist is a "blank screen," Yalom advocates for a humanistic approach.
- Transparency: He is known for his honesty with patients. He may admit his errors or share his own feelings about the therapeutic process.
- The Relationship Heals: Yalom believes that the relationship between the therapist and the client is the primary tool for healing, not just techniques or interpretations.
- Group Therapy: His book, The Theory and Practice of Group Psychotherapy, is considered the definitive text ("the bible") for group therapists worldwide.
3. "Teaching Novels" (The Books)
Yalom created a genre of psychotherapeutic literature that is accessible to the general public yet remains deeply professional.
Fictional Bestsellers:
- When Nietzsche Wept: A fascinating blend of reality and fiction, featuring Josef Breuer (Freud's mentor) and the philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche. The book explores the genesis of psychoanalysis ("the talking cure").
- Lying on the Couch: A novel about ethics, manipulation, and what goes on inside the therapist's own mind.
- Love's Executioner (and Other Tales of Psychotherapy): A collection of real case studies and novellas about working with patients. Yalom shows not only successes but also his own doubts and failures.
- The Schopenhauer Cure: A story about group therapy, facing mortality, and the philosophy of Arthur Schopenhauer.
4. Recent Years
Yalom always wrote about death, but in 2019 he encountered it personally when his wife, Marilyn, fell ill (they had been together for over 60 years). Together, they wrote the book "A Matter of Death and Life"—a moving and painful memoir about saying goodbye, the loss of a loved one, and his own aging process.
"The meaning of life is to live it in such a way that you do not have to regret the wasted years afterwards." — Irvin Yalom.
Why is Yalom Important?
Read more:
- Mriya.run: Space for Conscious Change. Learning, Practice & Tools
- The Hero's Journey
- Cure for Illusions: 7 Lessons from Irvin Yalom




















