For all things are of one kin and
of one form.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6 (tr
Long)
I have become so familiar with the Stoic
insistence that everything changes, how the continual process of generation,
modification, and destruction is always present in life, that I can easily
overlook the constant patterns of such change. Particular things will come and
they will go, but the shared form by which they come and go remains universal.
The players are different, so to speak, but the stories remain the same. Even
as everything seems new, there is still really nothing new under the sun,
because what is now has once been before, and will soon be again.
When I was very young, everything
seemed quite static and stable, and it took the passage of time to recognize
that what I though would always be there would actually pass away, sometimes
quite unexpectedly.
Then I noticed that things started
to come around again, that the very same circumstances and hardships, the very
same pleasures and pains that I had experienced before, were now being
experienced by others.
I would smile when I saw people
falling in love, because I had known that once. I would cry when I saw their
hearts broken, because I had been there, too. I saw the same hope and despair,
the same dreams and disappointments, the same commitments and betrayals.
Different people were involved, of course, and the settings were different, but
the situations were replaying themselves, and the choices people made, for good
or bad, were on a sort of loop.
The same sun rises and sets over the
world day after day, it shines brightly or is darkened through clouds, over all sorts of
varied landscapes and new generations, but it is still the same sun. Yes, one
day, I imagine, that sun will burn out, and then a different sun, but still
very much like it, will rise and set on a different world, but still very much
like it.
If I had the necessary gifts, I
would write a piece of music chronicling the lives of varied people in three
sequential decades, say the ‘70’s, ‘80’s, and ‘90’s, and make a film to go with
it, sometimes zipping ahead in fast forward, sometimes slowing down to zoom in
on this or that situation.
It could even, perhaps, have a
single, unnoticed observer throughout the whole affair, who alone sees how the more
things change, the more they stay the same. Someone like the nameless figure in
Kieslowksi’s Dekalog, a set of short
films where people struggle with the same old Ten Commandments now as they
always have, and as long as there have ever been rational animals.
The longer I’ve walked through this
world, the more I stumble across the same old problems, with the same old
solutions, and people having to relearn it all over again. This is hardly
mysterious, because it remains the same Nature, ordered by the same Providence,
populated by human beings who may speak differently, have wildly diverging
customs, and look quite distinct, but who ultimately all have the same needs.
They seek to understand, and they seek to love, because they are all creatures
of mind and will, even when they don’t recognize it at the time.
People have often told me that there
are really only a certain number of plots possible in drama, whether they
insist three are three, six, seven, or a few dozen. We may divide them in any
number of ways, just like we can with any set of principles or rules, but it
seems quite fitting that each story mirrors every other that preceded it, and
predicts every other that will follow it.
Written in 5/2007
IMAGE: If you have never seen this set of films, stop now, and go watch them. If you still have an open mind and a caring heart, both will be deeply changed. Then, after you are done laughing, crying, and banging your fists on the table, watch them again.
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