Take
away your opinion, and then there is taken away the complaint, "I have
been harmed."
Take
away the complaint, "I have been harmed," and the harm is taken away.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 4 (tr
Long)
This is
another one of those classic Stoic passages, and for very good reason. The
insight strikes to the very heart of what I like to call the Stoic Turn, and it
does so with clarity and simplicity. It helps me to recognize how it is
necessary for me to shift the weight I had assumed was in the power of things,
to the power of my own thinking about those things.
This has
become for me not just a question of theoretical reflection, but something I
have slowly but surely been learning to do in daily practice. I am continually
amazed at the influence my estimation has on my impressions, such that after I
have mentally stripped away the context of my own assumptions, I am left with
only the bare bones of something external acting upon my awareness. How little
actually proceeds from what is outside of me, and how much is imposed by what
is inside of me.
I am
faced with an impression, and I must immediately take care. The impression will
contain within it certain qualities, but I must not confuse them with the
qualities of my own thoughts. As soon as I say that something is frightening or
appealing, disturbing or desirable, I am already making judgments about what it
becomes for me.
To help
me with my own discipline, I think of a dog, and then I think of whether he is
a “good dog” or a “bad dog”.
Now I
can certainly say that simply by being a dog, by existing and by sharing in a
certain nature and purpose, the dog is in himself already good. But what I
usually mean by calling him good or bad is actually whether I myself approve or
disapprove of what he has done, whether it is pleasant or unpleasant,
convenient or inconvenient to me.
I can
laugh at myself when I remember that a dog must do his business, and that this is
good for him. But just because I was too lazy to let him out, and he has now
done his business on my carpet, does not make him bad at all. The bad is
entirely in how I see it.
Now I do
not wish to make light of the seriousness of our human experience, but even the
things that move and affect us the most deeply are different not in kind, but only
in degree.
When I
say, “she broke my heart,” I must be careful to distinguish between what she
may have done, and what I did with what she may have done. These are not the
same thing.
Again,
it may only be an image that helps me remember the deeper concept, but I often think
of an early scene from David Lean’s Lawrence
of Arabia:
Potter:
[trying to copy Lawrence's snuffing a
match with his fingers] Oooh! It
damn well hurts!
Lawrence:
Certainly it hurts.
Potter:
Well, what's the trick, then?
Lawrence:
The trick, William Potter, is not minding
that it hurts.
Written in 6/2005
Written in 6/2005
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