When
you wish to delight yourself, think of the virtues of those who live with you.
For instance, the activity of one, and the modesty of another, and the
liberality of a third, and some other good quality of a fourth.
For
nothing delights so much as the examples of the virtues, when they are
exhibited in the morals of those who live with us and present themselves in
abundance, as far as is possible. Wherefore we must keep them before us.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6 (tr
Long)
Back when I was a young pup, I would
probably have snorted and snickered at the claim that being moral was somehow pleasurable.
I imagine many people think quite the same thing. There’s the right way, and
then there’s the fun way. We’re somehow convinced that the two just don’t
cross.
It’s a weakness we all share. We
oppose the different aspects of our nature, that of our passions and that of our
reason. We forget to find a balance within ourselves, and we perversely prefer
to be at war with ourselves.
To keep myself from slipping back
into that sort of an attitude, I need to constantly remind myself that what is
good for me will be good for the whole, not for the part at the expense of the
whole, and certainly not for the lesser part at the expense of the greater
part.
The value of my feelings, and the
depth of my pleasures, will be in direct proportion to the value of the actions
from which they proceed. The value of my actions, in turn, follows from the
right exercise of my reason, and my understanding of what is good, both for
myself and for others.
It is only then that I see how the
mere pursuit of pleasure, simply for the sake of gratification alone, was
actually not so pleasing at all. Chasing after lusts becomes a sort of burden,
even an enslavement, providing more misery than it does delight. The drunk
struggles his way through another bottle, the adulterer gets tangled up in his
lies, the grasping man lies awake worried about how he will hold on to his
wealth. I end up chasing a contentment that never seems to come, always looking
for more and more.
There is a perfectly good reason
that the passions alone cannot satisfy me. My human nature is fulfilled by the
dignity of my actions, not merely by the power of my feelings, and how I feel
will depend upon how well I live. In this way, in an odd manner that I would
hardly expect, virtue provides the deepest and most lasting pleasure, even in
the face of all other sorts of suffering, because virtue is the very thing that
makes me whole.
Whenever I have had the good sense
to follow what is right first and foremost, I find myself slowly but surely
discovering a habit of the deepest joy. Since I begin to be at peace with
myself through my thoughts and deeds, I also come to be at peace in my
feelings.
Then I will sometimes foolishly let
myself be tempted by going straight for the gusto, assuming that such a path
will be quicker or easier. After I see the wasteland I have made, I wonder what
I possibly could have been thinking.
It is not only my own virtue that
can delight me, but also surrounding myself with the virtue of others. It is
not only a good example, but also a source of enjoyment to share life with
friends who practice integrity, compassion, and justice.
It is hardly an accident, therefore,
that the most miserable times of my life were those where I attached myself to
people consumed by vice, and the most joyful times of my life were those where
I surrounded myself with people who inspired me with character.
So much of the true delight in life
is indeed from the company we keep.
Written in 7/2007
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