Let
the part of your soul that leads and governs be undisturbed by the movements in
the flesh, whether of pleasure or of pain. And let it not unite
with them, but let it circumscribe itself and limit those affects to their
parts.
But
when these affects rise up to the mind, by virtue of that other sympathy that
naturally exists in a body that is all one, then you must not strive to resist
the sensation, for it is natural.
But
let not the ruling part of itself add to the sensation the opinion that it is
either good or bad.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 5 (tr
Long)
I long ago lost track of how many
times people have told me that Stoicism is cold, heartless, or denies the value
of our feelings. This is sadly what the word has come to mean in daily use, yet
this confuses the man who orders his emotions with the man who denies his
emotions.
It is ironic that the people I know
who genuinely live in a Stoic manner, those who don’t just mouth the fancy words
but embrace the spirit of the task, are some of the most deeply feeling people
I’ve ever met. They will have an intense sense of compassion, even empathy, for
others, and whether they are reserved or outgoing, will be profoundly conscious
of their own feelings and the feelings of others.
What will make them so different
from others, however, is not that they are passionate, but how they always
strive to be the masters of their feelings. They will neither let themselves be
tossed around by their emotions, pulled this way and that, nor suppress or
ignore them. They will accept what they feel, they will seek to understand it,
and then they will use the power of their judgment to put it in its proper
place. They will feel pleasure and pain, though they will not assume that these
impressions are in themselves beneficial or harmful, or have any direct control
over our estimation.
However they may express it, in
Stoic language or in different terms, such people understand that the heart
will feel, while the mind must guide those feelings. They recognize themselves as
beings of both reason and passion, where the latter must be in the service
of the former.
Marcus Aurelius explains that the
problem is never in having emotions at all. It is right and natural to feel,
and sometimes to feel very strongly. As
they say, real men aren’t afraid to cry. The problem is when we judge poorly
about them, and do not allow our understanding to make good use of them. The
passions are not good or bad, but only what I choose to do with them is good or
bad.
In the Phaedrus, Plato uses the allegory of a chariot to describe the
human soul. The charioteer represents the mind, while the horses represent our instincts
and passions. A similar image is employed in the Katha Upanishad:
Know
that the Atman (self) is the driver and the chariot,
and
the body is the chariot.
Know
that the Buddhi (intelligence, ability to reason) is the charioteer,
and
Manas (mind) is the reins.
The
senses are called the horses,
the
objects of the senses are their paths.
Formed
out of the union of the Atman, the senses and the mind,
him
they call the "enjoyer".
Just as the driver can direct the
power of the horses under his control to get to his destination, so the mind
can direct the power of impressions to live well. Just as the driver who cannot
tame his horses will be thrown or dragged about, the mind that cannot tame the
passions will be thrown or dragged about.
I am most certainly a creature of
feeling, and this has its rightful place. I am also a creature of reason, and
this has its rightful place. All is well when the driver leads the horses, but
things will end poorly when the horses lead the driver.
Written in 7/2006
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