It
is a shame for the soul to be first to give way in this life, when your body
does not give way.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6 (tr
Long)
We are all quite familiar with an
image of death where a soul, still eager and vibrant, is forced to leave this
earth, because the vessel of the body, all worn and broken, is now too weak to
contain it. There might still seem to be
so much more to do and so many things to discover, and we will regret our
departure like a child being asked to leave an amusement park.
For me, it is much like those many
nights when I was trying to read just the next few lines in a book that had me
hooked, but the day had exhausted me, and the words blurred as I drifted off
into sleep. Perhaps I could dream about what I had wanted to read?
The
spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak.
We may think this is unfortunate,
perhaps even tragic, but what is far more unfortunate and tragic is when the
places have been reversed. There may still be life in the body, energy to
expend, and years left to live, but the soul has given out. All the functions
of life are still there, continuing in a regular routine of making it through
the day, but there seems to be no will, no wonder, no joy. Commitment has given
way to indifference, truth has become blurred, and right and wrong have been
mixed into a sickening sort of gray.
A friend of mine would describe this
as a state where the lights were on, but nobody was home. It wasn’t that a
person was innately slow in their thinking, he said, but that he was simply
no longer choosing to think. The flesh was strong, but the spirit was no longer
willing.
Now while a body may whither or die
from starvation, disease, or just old age, from those harsh conditions that
have been imposed upon it, a soul does not seem to whither or die in quite the
same way. It doesn’t go from the outside in, but from the inside out. There can
be a strong and lively body wrapped around a weak and gloomy soul whenever a
man has chosen to give up the ghost.
It hasn’t been taken from him, but he has freely surrendered it.
I have seen this death of the soul
around me quite often, and I believe most often wherever I also see people
surrounded by all the affluence and gratification they could possibly desire. I
have seen it in myself quite often, and I believe most often whenever I have decided
to let the world rule me instead of ruling myself, or allowed myself to be
measured by conditions instead of character, or chosen to be led by the nose
instead of following my own path.
I don’t need to be a zombie, alive on the outside but dead on the
inside, simply going through the motions. My sick body may need to wait for the
doctor’s prescription, but my sick soul already contains the means for a cure.
I am the one who will decide if I will choose to know and love. No one else can
do that for me.
Written in 3/2007
IMAGE: Cornelis Bisschop, Old Woman Sleeping (17th century)
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