In
the gymnastic exercises suppose that a man has torn you with his nails, and by
dashing against your head has inflicted a wound.
Well,
we neither show any signs of vexation, nor are we offended, nor do we suspect
him afterwards as a treacherous fellow.
And
yet we are on our guard against him, not however as an enemy, nor yet with
suspicion, but we quietly get out of his way.
Something
like this let your behavior be in all the other parts of life. Let us overlook
many things in those who are like antagonists in the gymnasium. For it is in
our power, as I said, to get out of the way, and to have neither suspicion nor
hatred.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6 (tr
Long)
I have often struggled between the
extremes of sticking around the people who were bad for me, or allowing myself
to be consumed by resentment for them. There is a wonderful middle ground of neither
allowing any harm to be done to myself, nor doing any harm to others.
As a rational and a social animal,
man can always love his neighbor as himself, and he does not have to feel anger or
hatred when he gets out of the way of someone who will do him wrong. In my own
experience, I think of this as being able to judge without being judgmental, or
being able to distinguish right from wrong without becoming self-righteous or
dismissive.
And as this describes a harmonious
relationship to our fellows, it can also describe a harmonious relationship to
the entire world itself, and to the workings of Providence. I need never be hateful
to any of my neighbors, and I need never be hateful to any of my circumstances.
Many years ago, I did not step aside
when I saw someone dangerous heading my way. I do not need to delude myself by
claiming that my ignorance was not of my own making. Years of allowing myself
to be dragged about by dishonesty and disloyalty followed, and I consequently
allowed myself to react with resentment or despair. The way I faced all other
conditions and events mirrored this. My own estimation imposed a cynical and
suspicious tint to everything that I saw around me.
Life does not need to be this way. I
must deal with my sparring partners wisely, and I must manage anything that
comes my way without the slightest degree of malice. There is never any need to
cast blame outwards at anyone or anything, only to take responsibility for
myself inwards. I can say no, without spitting venom.
Written in 2/2007
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