Hippocrates,
after curing many diseases, himself fell sick and died. The Chaldean
soothsayers foretold the deaths of many, and then fate caught them too.
Alexander, and Pompey, and Caesar, after so often completely destroying whole
cities, and in battle cutting to pieces many ten thousands of cavalry and infantry, themselves too at last departed from life.
Heraclitus, after so many speculations on the conflagration of the universe,
was filled with water internally and died smeared all over with mud. And lice
destroyed Democritus, and other lice killed Socrates.
What
does all this mean? You have embarked, you have made the voyage, and you have
now come to the shore. Get out.
If
indeed to another life, there is no want of gods, not even there. But if to a
state without sensation, you will cease to be held by pains and pleasures, and
to be a slave to the vessel, which is as much inferior as that which serves it
is superior: for the one is intelligence and deity, while the other is earth
and corruption.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 3 (tr
Long)
I was
once told that young people behaved like fools because they didn’t fear death
enough, and that old people behaved like fools because they feared it too much.
Though I will sometimes get funny looks for saying it, I’ve always thought that
Stoicism has a very healthy sense of life and death, one that finds the balance
between the vain pride of assuming I am immortal on the one hand, and the morbid
horror of dancing with the reaper on the other.
I should
hardly fear either living or dying, because each gives a necessary context for
the other. Beginnings, middles, and endings ought to proceed naturally into one
another. If I have lived well I should be quite glad to die well, and only if I
have lived poorly will I shudder at the prospect of dying poorly.
I am
well advised to always have my kit packed and ready at a moment’s notice. If I
don’t feel ready to disembark from the ship to the shore, maybe I am afraid
that I squandered the voyage.
I have
my own thoughts on the question of life after death, but I make it a point not
to bore others with the details of those musings. I also deliberately bracket
the question for myself in a very practical sense, in that I try to live in a
way where it would make no difference whether or not I will go on to another
existence. I do this not because I think the question unimportant, but rather
because it helps me to consider doing good for its own sake, and not merely for
the promise of some later reward.
I see
something similar in what Marcus Aurelius has to say here, which in turn
mirrors the words of Socrates at the end of Plato’s Apology. If there is indeed another life, one where my individual
awareness will continue, then I can see this as a way to continue to live closer
to what is Divine. If there is no life beyond this one, and my individual
awareness will cease, I will no longer be troubled by the weakness of the body,
and in that way too I will be closer to what is Divine.
I should
never worry myself about death, because whether it is followed by something or
by nothing, it can always remind me of the importance of living well.
Written in 10/2004
Image: Adriaen van Utrecht, Vanitas—Still Life with Bouquet and Skull (1642)
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