Remember
how long you have been putting off these things, and how often
you have received an opportunity from the gods, and yet you do not
use it.
You
must now at last perceive of what Universe you are a part, and
of what Ruler of the Universe your existence is an efflux, and
that a limit of time is fixed for you, which if you do not use it
for clearing away the clouds from your mind, it will go, and you will go, and
it will never return.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 2 (tr
Long)
I often
ask myself the “what if?” question, and I wonder how things would be different
if I had followed through instead of holding back, or restrained myself instead
of acting on impulse. I find it too easy to tie myself in knots about missed
chances and wasted opportunities, speculating aimlessly about all the possible
outcomes.
I feel
regret for not helping a friend that needed me, and who’s passing made it
impossible for me to make it right. I feel resentment for reaching out to
someone I loved, only to be cast down further than I was before. I often wish I
had done these things differently.
Yet
making the best of opportunities is never about regretting things that can’t be
changed, or altering circumstances that are far beyond our power. The real chances
we are offered concern what we can do with what is given, right here and now, not
our ability to manipulate what we might receive.
There is
really only one opportunity that I am offered, and I am offered it for every
single moment that I am alive. Whatever may happen to me, will I act with
prudence when others act with ignorance? Will I act with fortitude when others
act with cowardice? Will I act with temperance when others act with excess?
Will I act with justice when others act with greed?
The only
possible reason I might delay on such a commitment is because I am not yet ready
to make the promise. The only reason I am not ready to make the promise is
because I do not have my house in order, because I do not yet care enough about
the right things, and I care too much about the wrong things.
I cared
too much about the pain that would have come with loving a friend to whom I
should have easily offered help, and I cared too much about the resentment that
came with loving a friend I should have easily forgiven.
To commit to virtue sometime seems
like stepping into the unknown. There’s the rub. It is never about what will or
will not happen, about the outcomes, but only about the merit of my commitment. The edge of that
cliff that seems so stable can very easily crumble, and I am no safer standing
on what I falsely perceive as solid ground than I am moving myself forward.
1980’s advertising
told us that life is short, so we should play hard. Stoicism tells us that life
is short, so we should live well. There is a real difference here, since
gratification and service are not the same thing.
Why
delay? Fear is countered by courage, and despair is countered by hope. Courage
and hope spring from depending upon what doesn’t fail. I should never fear what
cannot hurt me, and I should never despair of what I cannot lose.
My
circumstances will not hurt me, if I do not allow it, and my character is
something I need not lose, if I do not allow it. I should never think there is
more time for making things right, because the now is the only certain
opportunity.
Written in 6/2004
Image: Caspar David Friedrich, The Wanderer Above the Sea of Fog (c. 1817)
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