You
can pass your life in an equable flow of happiness, if you can go by the right
way, and think and act in the right way.
These
two things are common both to the soul of God and to the soul of man, and to the soul of every rational being, not to be hindered by another,
and to hold good to consist in the disposition to justice and
the practice of it, and in this to let your desire find its termination.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 5 (tr
Long)
I very much like the phrase, “to let
your desire finds its termination”. Desire is always a want of something, a yearning, and it is fulfilled and completed when its object has been
attained. My hunger is satisfied when I have eaten, my curiosity is satisfied
when I have understood, or my loneliness is satisfied when I have found a friend.
In the case of my happiness,
however, the object of my desire is not something from outside of me at all, but
proceeds from the very order of my own thoughts and actions. It is not even a
“thing” at all, but a doing, a way of living. Aristotle says, for example, that
happiness is not a feeling or a state, not defined by what happens to me, but
an activity, defined by the way I live.
The very nature of a rational being
is to act through its own judgments, and therefore to live with liberty. The excellence
of a rational being is to employ the liberty that comes from judgment in the
pursuit of what is true and good, and to always act with a respect for the
nature of all other things. A man fulfills his own dignity when he acknowledges
the dignity of his fellows, and treats them with justice.
That which completes us, makes us
whole, and brings with it serenity and joy in this life is not given to us from
without, but flows from within. My own choices are mine alone, and cannot be
taken from me. My deeds will only be as noble or base as my thoughts are noble or
base.
Happiness will often seem so
elusive, something just out of reach. I will only think this, however, if I
falsely assume it is something that is acquired through my circumstances. I
might think I am happy or sad, content or despondent, depending upon whether I
have achieved a certain set of goals out there in the world. Did I get a good
job? Do I live in a nice house? Did I marry the right girl? Do my friends respect
me? Such things may be preferable to us, but they do not constitute happiness.
My happiness follows only from how well I live, with wisdom and with virtue,
whatever circumstances may come my way.
I knew many people in college who
had a complex plan of life all mapped out, and they were certain that they
would be successes or failures by how many of these worldly goals they
achieved. These hoops jumped for the best promotions, these contacts made to
get ahead, a marriage that supports the best career, strategically placed children, and
a home in the best school district to start the cycle all over again.
It was saddening to see so many
people defining themselves by what they hoped would come to them, what would somehow
happen to them, instead of quite simply saying: “My map of life is to live as a
good man, regardless of my conditions.”
Happiness finds its rest, the
termination of its desires, through nothing more than my simple choice to live
with virtue. Anything that is of benefit to a man proceeds from this.
Written in 8/2006
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