It
is in our power to have no opinion about a thing, and not to be disturbed in
our soul.
For
things themselves have no natural power to form our judgments.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6 (tr
Long)
My own disposition is a sensitive one,
so I can easily become discouraged and disappointed by abuse, deception, or dismissal
from people I would like to be able to trust.
Now sometimes I find myself blaming
my own instincts, and sometimes I find myself blaming others for their vices.
Neither path, however, will lead me to any peace. My passions will be as they
are, and they have a way of working by their own patterns. The choices of
others will be as they are, and they should never be confused with my own
choices.
While I can’t usually determine how
something will feel, and I can’t really determine what people will do, I most
certainly can determine what I will make of those circumstances. I may have a
feeling of pain, for example, when someone treats me poorly, but it will be my
own judgment that informs the meaning I give to that feeling and to that
action.
Whether I choose to use circumstances
for my benefit, or choose to abuse them for my harm, or chose to disregard them
entirely, will proceed only from my own estimation. My thinking is certainly
not creating reality itself, but it is shaping how I will permit, or decide not
to permit, that reality to affect me.
I should never think of any external
event, or any impression that follows from an external event, as forcing me to
consider it in one way or in another. The mind is not passively moved about by
objects, but is rather an active principle that forms a conscious awareness of
those objects. I can react in my own way, based upon my own judgment, and there
is the good and the bad in it relative to me.
There is a liberation from the
burden of conditions here, an embrace of true freedom in the face of outside
forces. When I get angry at how I feel, or I resent what someone has done to
me, I am doing nothing less than dodging my own responsibility for my own
happiness. Blame can be so easy, because there is always an excuse.
Accountability can be tough, because I need to be strong enough not to need
excuses.
I need to avoid thinking that something
is inherently good because it is attractive, pleasant, or convenient. I likewise
need to avoid thinking that something is inherently bad because it is drab, painful, or difficult. The good or the bad in it for me will come
only from the place, the meaning, and the importance I decide to give it.
No comments:
Post a Comment