Consider
how many things in the same indivisible time take place in each of us, things that
concern the body and things that concern the soul.
And
so you should not wonder if many more things, or rather all things which come
into existence in that which is the one and all, which we call the Cosmos, exist in
it at the same time.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6 (tr
Long)
It becomes frighteningly easy to
ignore the scale, the depth, and the diversity of the Universe, and thereby
underestimate the profound and beautiful pattern in which all things participate.
Even though I am only a tiny part within that whole, I will also neglect my own
significance when I oversimplify my many aspects.
There isn’t just one change going on
within me at any given moment, but a whole array of them, all of them related
to one another and acting upon one another. Sometimes these different motions
seem to be working together, and sometimes they seem to be in opposition, but
each still plays a role within a greater harmony. Thinking, choosing, feeling,
acting or being acted upon, a state of exertion or a state of rest, coming or
going, growing or dying.
The way it is within each part is a
reflection of the order of the whole. When I consider only one aspect of my
existence, and judge myself by that alone, I am failing to understand the
fullness of myself, and what I am made to be. Likewise, when I consider only
one aspect of the whole world, and judge it by that alone, I am failing to
understand the fullness of the Universe, and what it is made to be. Narrow
thinking leads to narrow living.
Some people are intimidated when
they think of the vastness and complexity of things, though I suspect this may
only happen when we are tempted to view ourselves out of context. I don’t need
to feel small or insignificant when I see how big or broad everything else is.
I can just as easily be happy and proud to be a part of something so grand. The
whole and the part do not exclude one another, and the distinct importance of
one thing is not in conflict with the rather different importance of another.
I often think of those lines from The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, by
Douglas Adams:
Space
is big. You just won't believe how vastly, hugely, mind-bogglingly big it is. I
mean, you may think it's a long way down the road to the chemist's, but that's
just peanuts to space.
A friend of mine would use this as
an example of how meaningless life really was. In that vast expanse of space
and time, he said, we are surely just nothing.
“Not nothing,” I would say. “Still
something. Just not everything.” He did not take kindly to this, but we were
still friends.
Written in 3/2007
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