The
soul of man does violence to itself, first of all, when it becomes
an abscess and, as it were, a tumor on the Universe, so far as it
can. For to be vexed at anything which happens is a separation of ourselves from Nature, in some part of which the natures of all other things
are contained.
In
the next place, the soul does violence to itself when it turns
away from any man, or even moves towards him with the intention of injuring,
such as are the souls of those who are angry.
Fifthly,
when it allows any act of its own and any movement to be
without an aim, and does anything thoughtlessly and without considering what it is, it being right that even the smallest things be done
with reference to an end; and the end of rational animals is to
follow the reason and the law of the most ancient city and community.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 2 (tr
Long)
As long
as I can remember, I was told that it wasn’t nice to hurt other people. Now
such an appeal can help to remind me that I should nurture respect for the
rights of others, and sympathy for how they might feel. Yet there would
sometimes be a sinister little voice deep inside, that one that would
seductively suggest: “Well, sure, you might hurt someone else, but think about
how much it will help you?” After all, despite what I was being told, I just
had to look around me to see how many people seemed to thrive on the losses of
others.
Yet that
voice can only seem convincing if we are still working from a confused premise,
the thinking that our vices may bring harm to others, but can also offer
benefit for ourselves. As usual, Stoicism considers this from a different
perspective.
Whenever
I act unjustly toward another, I am most certainly doing wrong to him. Yet of
all the things I may take away with force, with guile, or with deceit, I remain
powerless over the very core of what he is, a being of reason and choice who
can rule his own actions. I may act with vice toward someone else, but I can
never make someone else act with vice. What he makes of the hurt I throw at him
will be entirely up to him. He may even use it to be good himself in return.
At the
same time, what have I done to myself? I may have affected the fortune of
another, but I have deeply harmed my own nature. In choosing vice, I have
surrendered the dignity of my own reason, and I have neglected the very core of
who I am. My own actions were the only things that were ever truly my own, and
now I have wasted them by loving all the wrong things. My intended victim may lose the
goods of his body, but I lose the goods of my soul.
One of
the first things I noticed in this passage by Marcus Aurelius is the claim that
when we live poorly, we are really doing violence to ourselves. The text tells
me not only what I should avoid in the way that I live, but also the very
reasons why I am the one who ends up hurt the most.
Whenever
I go around declaring war, hoping to be victorious over my enemy, I have
already made myself my own worst victim. I am fighting myself most of all.
When I
feel the world has been unfair, and that I have been treated poorly by my
circumstances, I may think I should lash out and blame everything around me. I
am hardly doing any violence to the Universe when I choose this, but I am
certainly doing violence to myself.
When I
resent my neighbor, and harbor malice toward him, I may think I will feel
better if I cause him pain and loss, and that he should feel as badly as I may
feel. I am hardly doing any violence to the Universe when I choose this, but I
am certainly doing violence to myself.
When I am
confronted by the lust for pleasure and the fear of pain, I may think it
easiest to surrender my knowledge of what is right for the feeling of what is
gratifying. I am hardly doing any violence to the Universe when I choose this,
but I am certainly doing violence to myself.
When I
see a difficulty looming ahead of me, I may think it more expedient to deceive
than to practice integrity, to sacrifice truth for the sake of convenience. I
am hardly doing any violence to the Universe when I choose this, but I am
certainly doing violence to myself.
When I
grow tired of effort, and I am tempted by the achievement of what is immediate
at the expense of what is ultimate, I may think it best to neglect reflection
on the meaning and purpose of my actions. I am hardly doing any violence to the
Universe when I choose this, but I am certainly doing violence to myself.
Like
they say, it only comes back to bite me.
Written in 11/2004
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