Do
the things external that fall upon you distract you? Give yourself
time to learn something new and good, and cease to be whirled around.
But
then you must also avoid being carried about the other way. For those too are triflers, who have wearied themselves in life by their
activity, and yet they have no object to which to direct every
movement, and, in a word, all of their thoughts.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 2 (tr
Long)
If I am
to worry less about what is outside of me, I must be certain to have something
worth caring about inside of me.
It is
never enough to tell myself that I must not be distracted by all the lesser
things, when I have hardly paid any attention to nurturing the greater things. Stoicism
is not about being a bump on a log, because life is itself defined by action;
it is the end toward which all that action is ordered that will make all the
difference.
Years
ago, I enjoyed the company of one of the most charming old hippies I have ever
met. When people asked him if he’d been at Woodstock, he would reply that he
never thought music was about making more money for shady promoters. He had
such a wonderful way of always sticking it to the man, of calling out greed,
consumerism, and the decadence that is our entitled modernity.
As I got
to know him, and I learned about all the things he thought didn’t really
matter, including sucking up to your boss, mortgages, neckties, and working in very tall
buildings, I asked him what he actually thought did matter. I was waiting for
an epiphany.
He
shrugged. “None of it matters,” he said softly. I loved this man, and though I
have long lost touch with him, I still love him. Yet for that very brief
moment, I saw something inside of him he had never revealed to me before. He
knew exactly the things Nature asked him to avoid, the shallowness of wealth,
power, deceit, and arrogance, but he had no idea what to put in its place. For
all of his exuberance and wit, he seemed quite adrift.
We would
share Turkish coffee and cigarettes together at a local folk music club, and
one day he just got up and told us he was moving on. “Don’t write,” he said,
“because you won’t know where to find me.” The last memory I have of him is the
sound of his old pale green Datsun backfiring.
I think
of that man quite often, because I hope he found the peace and purpose every one of us
deserves. When I first read this passage from Marcus Aurelius, he immediately
came to mind. I was also the sort of fellow who first knew what to stay clear
of, without also finding something to be dedicated to.
I would
lie awake at night, thinking about finding someone who would choose to love me
with complete dedication, about discovering friends who appreciated me for my
own sake, about having my music, my writing, and my thoughts respected. I always hoped that I could make a living from doing what I loved.
I now
see how all of those dreams were about what I wanted to happen to me, and not
about the merit of what I did. Change the wording ever so slightly, and you
can change the meaning quite drastically.
I would probably
never make a living from doing what I loved, because most people will only pay
you for what they want, not for what you want. Instead, I could make a life doing
what I loved. Making a living and making a life are very different things.
Stay
clear of what will harm you, but most importantly stay close to what will heal
you. Define yourself by what you are, not by what you aren’t. Find joy in the
greatness of what you may choose to do, not grief in the frustration of what others
might do to you.
Written in 7/2004
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