. . . When she saw that the Muses
of Poetry were present by my couch giving words to my lamenting, she was
stirred a while; her eyes flashed fiercely, and she said:
“Who has suffered these seducing
mummers to approach this sick man? Never do they support those in sorrow by any
healing remedies, but rather do they ever foster the sorrow by poisonous
sweets. These are they who stifle the fruit-bearing harvest of reason with the
barren briars of the passions.
“They free not the minds of men
from disease, but accustom them to it. I would think it less grievous if your
allurements drew away from me some uninitiated man, as happens in the vulgar
herd. In such a one my labors would not be harmed, but this man has been
nourished in the lore of the Eleatics and the Academics. To him you have
reached? Away with you, Sirens, seductive unto destruction! Leave him to my
Muses to be cared for and to be healed.”
Their band, thus berated, cast a
saddened glance upon the ground, confessing their shame in blushes, and passed
forth dismally over the threshold.
For my part, my eyes were dimmed
with tears, and I could not discern who was this woman of such commanding
power. I was amazed, and turning my eyes to the ground I began in silence to
await what she should do.
Then she approached nearer and
sat down upon the end of my couch. She looked into my face heavy with grief and
cast down by sorrow to the ground, and then she raised her complaint over the
trouble of my mind in these words: . . .
— from Book
1, Prose 1
As
dangerous as completely ignoring our feelings is also dwelling on them too heavily.
It is never feelings themselves that are the problem, but what I may choose to
do with those feelings, and how I will act to help them make me better.
The
Muses of Poetry are not encouraging Boethius to move forward, but are allowing
him to languish in place, and he is sinking under his own weight.
How many
medicines have I taken that have hardly been cures at all, but have ultimately
made the agony worse? They only compounded the suffering by messing about with
the appearances and symptoms, and neglecting the root causes.
I once
faced the worst bout of the flu I had ever come across, and I knew that my body
needed rest and nourishment to fight the infection, and to rebuild its
strength.
Yet I
foolishly took some pills that repressed my fever, numbed my pain, and turned
my thinking into mush, because I was so sure I had to be at work. Yes, what I
did for pennies apparently mattered more than my health. I then had to spend
twice as much time later doing the reasonable thing by embracing a proper
recovery.
As it is
with the body, so it is with the soul. It isn’t just a matter of rearranging,
blocking, or wallowing in my passions. Reason can show me how to make it right,
by going to the source, and making it right there.
My own
first response to the coming of the Black Dog was to wash him away in drink.
When I only woke up with even more despair, I tried to simply ignore him. Lying
to myself didn’t change the reality of it, of course, and I then tried to wish
him away with all sorts of diversions and ways of busying myself. It was much
like spending my time repainting a house infested by termites.
What
could possibly be left? Conventional medicine offered various drugs and
therapy, but these had very little lasting effect. I began to recognize that
the feelings were not going anywhere. Yet what could my own thinking, my own most
powerful tool, begin to do with the presence of those feelings?
The
first thing I ever really noticed about this passage, once I began to read it
not as an intellectual exercise but as an opportunity for healing, was the way
Boethius described how both he and the Muses can stare at nothing but the ground
beneath them in silence.
I related
to that immediately, since I had started doing much the same when I lost my
anchor in the affection of another person. It had been an illusion I had
created for myself, but it had seemed there on one day, and suddenly it was gone
on the next.
It was
quite literal, not just figurative. My eyes began to be lowered, because I was
afraid to see anyone else or to meet a passing gaze, and I spoke very little,
because I was afraid of being bitten in response. There was a cringing shame
behind all of it.
I felt
sorry for myself. No one sat down next to me, though I really just needed to
sit down with myself, and have a really good heart-to-heart.
Written in 4/2105
Written in 4/2105
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