This
you must always bear in mind, what is the Nature of the whole, and
what is my nature, and how this is related to that, and what kind of a part it is of what kind of a whole; and that there is no one who
hinders you from always doing and saying the things which are
according to the Nature of which you are a part.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 2 (tr
Long)
So much
of undertaking the Stoic Turn involves seeing things in a broader perspective,
and in recognizing not only who I am, but also how I exist in relationship to
all other things. Sound estimation is not merely in squinting at something a
bit differently, but in placing circumstances and actions in their right context.
Accordingly,
I should never conceive of anything that happens to me, or any choice I make,
or any deed I perform in isolation, because everything in Nature shares in a
relationship with everything else. I will not always understand the specifics
of all these connections, but I can trust with certainty that nothing exists in
vain, and that Providence always acts for a purpose.
Marcus
Aurelius is not only reminding us that every part exists within the fullness of
the whole, of my particular human nature within the binding Nature of all
things, but also that my own place as a part within the whole can never be
taken from me. It is left to my power, and only to my power, whether or not I
will choose to fulfill that place, however humble it may seem to me.
I have
sometimes wondered if this is just a bit of wishful thinking, and if I am
giving myself a power and significance I don’t really have. Surely there are so
many ways that I can lose my place in things, that the events around me can
take away my ability to act, that I become just another helpless piece of fate
swept along by circumstances?
I would
only think so, however, if I am not fully applying all the Stoic lessons on the
true source of happiness. Human beings are not only living things, but living
things endowed with reason and choice, and are defined not by what happens to
them, but by what they do. Now Fortune may indeed take away my possessions, my
health, or my reputation, and she can even take away my life, but that is
hardly what decides my place as a part within the whole. It isn’t my part to
rule to world, or to decide how it will treat me, but it is simply my part to
rule myself.
Nature
has ordered it such that I have within me the power to determine my own choice,
and that anything that may happen to me simply gives me greater opportunities
to exercise that choice. Viewed from this perspective, I can say not only that
nothing can hinder my own action, but also that everything can assist my own
action, if I just make use of it rightly.
I can
rest assured that as long as I decide to pursue my own good of living with
wisdom and virtue, I am also playing my own part in the good of all that
surrounds me. As long as I keep in mind my own responsibility in relationship
to my world, I will hardly fail.
Written in 8/2004
Image: "The Great Chain of Being", from Didacus Valdes, Retorica Christiana (1579)
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