Observe
constantly that all things take place by change, and accustom yourself
to consider that the nature of the Universe loves nothing so much as
to change the things which are, and to make new things like them.
But
you are thinking only of seeds that are cast into the earth, or
into a womb; but this is a very vulgar notion.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 4 (tr
Long)
I have
quite a few weaknesses of disposition and character, and one of my greatest is
surely my sense of nostalgia. I like things the way I remember them, at some
ideal moment in my mind. Change will therefore often frustrate me.
I
accordingly need to remind myself every day that it is never best for anything
to be preserved in some static state. Transformation is never the destruction
of something, but the beginning of something else, and the order of change is precisely how being expresses itself most fully.
Everything
is a seed for something else, and not just in the narrow sense of how living
things reproduce. Each circumstance, relation, or state of affairs is, in turn,
the grounds out of which all things are renewed. It helps me to think of the
stages of change itself as harmonious and beautiful, where existence is
actualized and perfected in becoming.
Whether
I may find anything pleasant or painful, I need to look at it from the side of
its own purpose. It was something different, it is even now being altered, and
it will soon be something else. It is right and good that the Universe is
constantly active, and not merely passive. After all, it would hardly be much
of a Universe if it didn’t do
anything.
A
distinctly human flaw can be wishing for something to be different than it is
now, and either looking to the past for relief, which is always my temptation,
or hoping for something else in the future. I can’t be thinking of these
different aspects as being separate from one another, or being able to exist
independently, for each is a part of the whole.
Many
years ago, I would resent being young, and I wanted to be older, and now I will
equally resent being old, and I want to be young again. Like any good story, the
beginning, the middle, and the end, all work together, and it hardly makes
sense to read only one chapter over and over, or to read them out of order.
Even as the players change, no story ever really ends at all, and it becomes
the start of a whole new story.
I can
certainly appreciate the past, though I serve myself very poorly when I think
only of the past. The past can still be good for me, but only in the sense that
it made possible what I can be now, and what will ultimately become of me. It
is a package deal.
I used
to think it quite sentimental when people advised me to always tell the people I
love how much they matter, because what was said before had become distant, and
what can be said in the future is never guaranteed. I appreciate this far more
lately. As with all things in Stoicism, there is no time like the now, even as
it will never be the same the next time I look at it.
Written in 11/2005
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