Death
is a cessation of the impressions through the senses, and of the pulling of the
strings that move the appetites, and of the discursive movements of the
thoughts, and of the service to the flesh.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6 (tr
Long)
It is easier for many of us to see
the negative, to recognize the bad in something long before discerning anything
good. We may, in fact, be deliberately looking out for the things we can
complain about, while ignoring the things we can appreciate.
The Stoic recognizes, however, that the
good or the bad in our lives will depend entirely upon how we make use of our
circumstances. I can, if only I so choose, resist the temptation to dwell upon
the doom and gloom. I can deliberately attend to what will bring benefit
instead of harm. There is a certain satisfaction in being able to “turn” a
situation, having altered nothing about the conditions themselves, but having
altered everything about my estimation of them.
Death, for example, will tend to
immediately make us uncomfortable. It is a necessary component of life, and we
seem to be quite ready to portray it regularly in news and entertainment, but
there is certain awkward hush when it stands directly in front of us. We
formulaically offer our mumbled regrets and prayers, look around nervously, and
hope it will just all go away. It is the end of things, after all, and we don’t
like to think of ourselves ceasing to be.
Regardless of whether we think of
death as the erasing of self or the transformation of self, I need not consider
only what is lost, but I can also consider what is gained.
Nothing, in the Stoic sense, ever
completely ends at all. It changes into something else, and I can rest assured
that I am playing my own necessary part in the unfolding of Nature. I can also
find peace in knowing that those very things I found so troublesome and
frustrating in this life, the ones that often seemed such a burden, will now be
lifted from me.
Marcus Aurelius tells us exactly
what those apparent hindrances have been, and reminds us that we will now be
free of them.
I will be free of the senses, which
can have a way of assaulting me with waves of confusing and disturbing images.
I will be free of pain, which can
leave me weak and cast down, just as much as I will be free of pleasure, which
can leave me enslaved to desire.
I will be free of the thinking that
can be so befuddled, uncertain, and unclear, stumbling about here and there,
unsure of where I have come from and where I am going.
I will be free of the demands of the
body, those ridiculous needs that always required so much my plodding effort
and routine.
I should never allow worry to
consume me in this life, of course, but death can be said to allow me to no
longer have to attend to that pesky temptation of worry. Understood rightly, it
is hardly silly to say that it all depends on how I look at it.
There was a good reason Socrates
suggested in the Phaedo that we can
think of death not as the ending of what is pleasant, but as being liberated from
what is unpleasant. Whatever may become of me, it will at the very least be a
change into something completely new.
Written in 3/2007
IMAGE: Jacques-Louis David, The Death of Socrates (1787)
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