I too was inspired by Frankl. I read it while conducting group therapy at a high-security psychiatric hospital. It inspired me to go a step further, just like you've done. I created a program and wrote a book called Finding Your Way, A Guide to Building Hopes and Dreams to teach people to discover their own answers, and create their own path and purpose--not through prayer or wishful thinking, but through skill-building and making choices, concrete, tangible actions. In this way, people with no hope can perform cognitive reframing to become more empowered. Frankl was right: we "search for meaning," and that is precisely why we never find it. The same is true of happiness. Meaning and happiness are not ends of their own, but byproducts of a fulfilling life. Frankl's logotherapy is still alive and well in Europe, and it has some interesting corollaries, like Acceptance and Commitment therapy, which are worth exploring in a non-dogmatic fashion. Thanks for the article.