Such
as are your habitual thoughts, such also will be the character of your mind,
for the soul is dyed by the thoughts.
Dye
it then with a continuous series of such thoughts as these:
For
instance, that where a man can live, there he can also live well. But he must
live in a palace? Well then, he can also live well in a palace.
And
again, consider that for whatever purpose each thing has been constituted, for
this it has been constituted, and towards this it is carried, and its end is in
that towards which it is carried. And where the end is, there also is the
advantage and the good of each thing.
Now
the good for the reasonable animal is society, for that we are made for society
has been shown above. Is it not plain that the inferior exists for the sake of
the superior? But the things that have life are superior to those that have not
life, and of those that have life the superior are those that have reason.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 5 (tr
Long)
I would
often sneer when people spoke about the power of positive or negative thinking,
because I would still practice being dismissive as a misguided means of
protection. If I could scoff at it, or roll my eyes, or ignore it entirely, I
could make things that felt uncomfortable seem to disappear.
What a funny thing, there I was, proving the very point I was claiming to cast aside. I was
managing only the negative side, of course, and it would take the discipline of
Stoicism to learn far more about the positive side.
I began
to see more and more how deeply thinking shapes living, and how powerful habit
is at solidifying such thinking. I saw how harmful my earlier bitterness had
been, and I saw how beneficial my later acceptance was starting to be. It
sometimes felt like I was transforming the world itself, though I was actually
just doing a thorough rebuilding of myself, and how I looked out at that world.
Keeping
those thoughts constant throughout the day, and not just as a luxury for times
of leisure and reflection, has always been a key element for me. At first I
would need to deliberately, sometimes quite forcefully, push certain values
into the front of my awareness when I faced a difficulty. As time went on,
however, these became more of a second nature, and they could arise
spontaneously.
The
examples of good thoughts Marcus Aurelius offers are ones I have always needed
to remember.
It is
always within my grasp to live with excellence, regardless of where, or under
what conditions, that might be. Once I brag or complain about my surroundings,
I have succumbed to my surroundings. I know I am on the right track when I see
how luxury can be just as much of a hindrance as poverty, if only I permit it
to do so.
I am
able to live with excellence only because I can keep in mind the very purpose
for which I exist. If I am acting to acquire, to consume, or to be gratified, I
am forgetting that purpose. The right reason for choice and action must always
be there in my immediate awareness, and I must not allow anything else to sway
me.
Through
all of this, while Stoic principles proceed from self-reliance, I must never
confuse such an independence of thinking with an isolation or separation from
others. Because I am a creature of reason, I can understand how my own purpose
is joined with the purpose of my neighbor. We are made for cooperation, not
conflict; we are here to assist one another, not to fight one another.
Always discerning
the difference between greater and lesser things, in every situation, is
necessary if I wish to have right thoughts lead to right action.
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