You
are not dissatisfied, I suppose, because you weigh only so many litrae and not
three hundred?
Be
not dissatisfied then that you must live only so many years, and not more. For
as you are satisfied with the amount of substance that has been assigned to
you, so be content with the time.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6 (tr
Long)
I
was a tiny fellow when I was a child, both shorter than all the other boys, and
so skinny that you’d miss me completely if I was standing next to you sideways.
I always wished that I was bigger and stronger, so that I wouldn’t be mocked
and pushed around.
Adolescence
suddenly gave me height, and I was then far taller than everyone else. Now I
was an even more ridiculous beanpole. How I wished I had been made different,
and how I wished I could change it all. But there was really nothing to be done
about it. I could eat voraciously, I could go running for miles and miles, or I
could do dozens of push-ups every day, but I never buffed out, as they say.
That was the way that Nature had chosen to make me.
Since
then, I have always felt empathy for folks who wish they were different, thick
or thin, tall or short, broad or narrow. It was one part for me in
understanding that the dignity of a person never has anything to do with
height, or weight, or measurements. Dignity has everything to do with how we
choose to live.
How
big or how small we are, or how big or how small we might wish to be, is not
much different than how long or how short our lives will be, or how long or
how short we might wish our lives to be. By all means, eat well, exercise, and go
see your doctor, even when nothing seems to ail you. Providence, however, has
assigned a time, just as Providence has assigned a measure for all things.
A
very dear friend in high school, one of the few who didn’t choose to tell me I
looked like a sickly AIDS patient, died in her third year of college. We usually
bickered, and we often disagreed, but I always knew that she was someone I
could trust absolutely. When she was gone, I was deeply affected by the fact
that so many of the good folks seemed to die young, and so many of the bad
folks seemed to be able to hang on forever and ever.
But
there is never any good or bad in how long anyone lives, not in and of itself.
My old friend died at the age of twenty, and in that time she managed to live
with more character and commitment than most people can manage if they live for
a century. To be content with whatever time may be given is never an act of
surrender. It is an act of courage, an acceptance that comes from love, and
never giving in to regret or resentment.
My
friend from high school would often tell me how much it troubled her that she
was quite short, and given that I was quit tall, we would have a good laugh
about it all. Her passing made me think shamefully about how I had not been a
decent enough friend for her, while she was still around.
There
is the key, I think. Love while you can, with all of your heart, and with all
of your mind, and with all of your soul. Tomorrow is never guaranteed.
Written in 7/2007
IMAGE: All hail, the mighty beanpole! ;-)
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