What
is evil to you does not subsist in the ruling principle of another,
nor yet in any turning and mutation of your corporeal covering.
Where
is it then? It is in that part of you in which subsists the power of
forming opinions about evils. Let this power then not form such opinions, and all is well.
And
if that which is nearest to it, the poor body, is burnt, filled
with matter and rottenness, nevertheless let the part which forms
opinions about these things be quiet, that is, let it judge that nothing
is either bad or good which can happen equally to the bad man and the
good.
For
that which happens equally to him who lives contrary to Nature and
to him who lives according to Nature, is neither according to Nature nor contrary to Nature.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 4 (tr
Long)
Having
come into this world at the height of Flower Power, I was quite familiar with the
many appeals to having a “positive attitude”. I found, however, that this was
often not considered with much depth, and I was never satisfied being told that
it required “just having good thoughts.” What made the thoughts good, and how should
I go about forming them? I know, nobody likes the annoying fellow who asks the
awkward questions.
I also
noticed that for many, the purpose of a good attitude was seen as a means of
receiving good things, and not about a means for doing them. I immediately wondered
if I should expect the quality of my thinking or wishing to somehow directly
change what happened in the world, or whether it more properly served to change
me?
I
remember some of the business gurus of the 1980’s arguing that if I only thought rich hard enough, I would then become rich. I naturally asked if making
money would make me truly rich at all, and if there were better things at which
to direct my willpower.
Yet
there is something deeply Stoic about the idea that my happiness depends on my
thinking, if only I understand the context rightly. I need to clarify for
myself what form my thoughts should be taking, and what I might expect in
return for modifying my thinking.
Once my
estimation shifts from seeking the good in the thinking of others, or in the
circumstances of my body and my surroundings, to seeking the good in my own
judgment itself, I have made the most necessary change in my attitude. From
this, I can proceed to recognizing how anything that happens to me will only be
as good or bad for me as I decide to make it. What is usually understood as
gain or loss, triumph or tragedy, is all equally an opportunity for making
myself better.
For all
the effort I can put into planning and execution, the world will unfold on its
own terms. I am left with only one thing that is distinctly mine, and that I
can rely upon without question. This is the merit of my own actions, how
anything I can do reflects my love for my own nature, within the harmony of all
of Nature.
I need
not think of my circumstances defining me, or wishing them to be one way or
another. Things around me may seem to fall apart, I may be surrounded by
malice, and my situation may seem hopeless. It is hardly so, because the hope
isn’t from the situation, but in what I can make of myself in the situation.
I deeply
appreciate how Marcus Aurelius observes that both good and bad men will
confront exactly the same things in life, and will only differ in how they make
sense and use of them. Good and bad folks can both be rich or poor, healthy or
sick, loved or unloved, have the world handed to them a silver platter or
struggle to hang on by their fingernails.
If
Providence had wanted such things to be our measure, she would have made the
good guys worldly successes, and the bad guys worldly failures. She could
perhaps have ironically done the exact reverse. She did neither, but it is all
mixed and blended together, each of us with our distinct baggage.
A
positive attitude isn’t about changing, by power or cleverness, the cards I
have been dealt, but playing that hand with integrity and justice. I believe
this should be the form of my own thinking, and also itself the reward I can
hope to expect. Whatever is fully good asks for nothing beyond itself.
Written in 12/2005
Image: Cassius Marcellus Coolidge, Poker Game (1894)
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