Install
openclaw skills install when-nietzsche-weptIrvin D. Yalom's When Nietzsche Wept — a novel of obsession, therapy, and philosophy set in 1882 Vienna, where Josef Breuer treats Friedrich Nietzsche's suicidal depression and they heal each other. Covers 5 use cases: ① Josef Breuer — the pioneering physician: his obsession with patient Bertha Pappenheim (Anna O.), his midlife crisis, and his transformation from healer to patient ("Josef Breuer" "When Nietzsche Wept Breuer" "Breuer and Anna O") ② Friedrich Nietzsche — the philosopher in crisis: his suicidal despair, his migraines, his isolation, and his reluctance to be treated ("Nietzsche in When Nietzsche Wept" "Nietzsche character" "Nietzsche depression") ③ Lou Salomé — the woman who brings them together: brilliant, independent, and unforgettable ("Lou Salomé" "Lou Salomé Nietzsche" "When Nietzsche Wept Lou") ④ The Therapeutic Relationship — the novel's core: Breuer and Nietzsche treat each other, reversing roles as doctor and patient ("therapy novel" "existential therapy" "Yalom therapy fiction") ⑤ Nietzsche's Philosophy — the ideas in the novel: eternal recurrence, the will to power, amor fati, becoming who you are ("eternal recurrence" "will to power" "amor fati" "Nietzsche philosophy novel") Trigger when users say: "When Nietzsche Wept" "Irvin Yalom" "Yalom" "Nietzsche" "Breuer" "Lou Salomé" "eternal recurrence" "will to power" "therapy" "existential" "psychotherapy" "amor fati" "Anna O" "Zarathustra" "becoming who you are" "Vienna 1882" Related skills: a-brief-history-of-intelligence (philosophy of mind), clear-thinking (cognitive clarity), 21-lessons-for-the-21st-century (existential questions), conscious-business (meaning and purpose), absolute-tao (existential wisdom).
openclaw skills install when-nietzsche-weptOn first load, the AI MUST proactively present this guide.
Welcome to When Nietzsche Wept 🎭 Try copying one of these messages to me:
"What is When Nietzsche Wept about?" "Who is Josef Breuer?" "Who is Lou Salomé?" "What is the therapeutic relationship?" "What does eternal recurrence mean?"
Or just say: "Map this book to my life."
[One specific, immediate action the user can take right now.]
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*Generated by [Heardly App](https://www.heard.ly) — turning books into knowledge you can Listen and Execute.*
| What the user is doing | Read this reference |
|---|---|
| Understanding Josef Breuer | references/ref-01.md |
| Understanding Friedrich Nietzsche | references/ref-02.md |
| Understanding Lou Salomé | references/ref-03.md |
| Understanding the therapy / healing | references/ref-04.md |
| Understanding Nietzsche's philosophy | references/ref-05.md |
✅ "What is When Nietzsche Wept about?" → A fictional encounter between Josef Breuer and Friedrich Nietzsche in 1882 Vienna, where they form a therapeutic relationship and heal each other. ✅ "Who is Josef Breuer?" → A Viennese physician, pioneer of the talking cure, in midlife crisis. He treats Nietzsche's migraines. ✅ "Who is Friedrich Nietzsche?" → The philosopher, 38, in suicidal despair over his health, his isolation, and Lou Salomé's rejection. ✅ "Who is Lou Salomé?" → The brilliant woman who brings Breuer and Nietzsche together. Nietzsche proposed to her. She refused. ✅ "What is the pact?" → Breuer treats Nietzsche's physical symptoms. Nietzsche treats Breuer's existential despair. ✅ "What is the talking cure?" → Breuer's discovery: patients get better by talking about their problems. The foundation of psychoanalysis. ✅ "What is eternal recurrence?" → Nietzsche's thought experiment: if you had to live your life again and again, exactly as it is, would you rejoice? ✅ "What is amor fati?" → Love your fate. Not just acceptance, but active love of everything that happens. ✅ "How does the novel end?" → Both men are healed. Breuer returns to his family. Nietzsche writes Zarathustra. ✅ "What is the novel's message?" → The deepest healing happens through genuine human connection.
The most dangerous assumption about When Nietzsche Wept: believing that Nietzsche is the patient and Breuer is the doctor. The novel's genius is the reversal: both are patient, both are healer. Nietzsche's philosophical insights heal Breuer's existential despair. Breuer's therapeutic method forces Nietzsche to confront his own humanity. The novel argues that the deepest therapeutic encounter is a genuine human meeting between two equal people, each willing to be changed by the other. Yalom's existential therapy is not a technique — it is a relationship.
💡 Heardly Tip: After reading this novel, read Nietzsche's actual works — particularly Thus Spoke Zarathustra and Beyond Good and Evil. Yalom's fictional treatment is a beautiful entry point, but Nietzsche's own writing will change how you think about life, fate, and the courage to become who you are.