—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6 (tr
Long)
There are many Stoic thoughts and
expressions that stick to me like glue, day in and day out, but this one is
consistently the most helpful whenever I feel anger.
I have felt hurt, and my base inclination
is to repay it in kind. It boils and bubbles under the surface. I become so
caught up in my emotional turmoil that I completely lose sight of what is good
and evil. Receiving pain, I then assume, requires causing pain, compounded with
interest, and fueled by nothing but vengeance.
And all of this occurs only because
I have falsely judged that gratification takes precedence over decency.
I am certain that Providence permits
me to bear what is bad, only so that I may learn to live by what is good. After
all, if something is harmful, I should not cast myself further into it. I
should turn the other way.
A few years back, I received an odd
message from a fellow I’d known while I was working in social services. He
attached a lengthy series of e-mails, and explained in great detail how I should
slyly forward this information to destroy the career of someone who had done me
great harm in the past. He said he was doing me a favor.
The man was certainly clever, but
hardly acting from good will. He put two and two together, and saw a means for promoting
himself, without directly involving himself. A check on my part revealed that
he was now working for the same state agency that his intended victim worked
for. There was obviously much more to the story.
Yet, for a very brief moment, I felt
that temptation of power over others. I pondered the sick satisfaction that
would certainly come from causing intense suffering, years after I had suffered
intensely. I actually considered agreeing to his plan.
I have done some terrible things in
my life, and I have entertained twisted temptations. This was, I suddenly
realized, the worst of the bunch, and if I allowed myself to succumb to the
offer, I would then be a monster who passes all understanding. I would become
everything I hated. How could there be any turning back after that?
That smoking gun is surely still out
there. Reading those e-mails all the way through made me feel quite sick.
Nothing could have been worse, however, than my meeting greed with more greed,
hatred with more hatred.
My Uncle Alois would always say,
“They already have their reward!” Indeed they do, though it is a self-imposed
punishment, and not a reward at all. Another may choose to destroy himself with
anger and selfishness, but I can be better. Nature gives me that very chance,
every time I feel slighted.
Love is the only answer in the face
of hatred.
Written in 4/2012
IMAGE: Jakob Emanuel Gaisser, The Revenge (c. 1860)
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