What
kind of people are those whom men wish to please, and for what
objects, and by what kind of acts?
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6 (tr
Long)
As clear, direct, and simple as
Stoic principles can be, I still find myself foolishly distracted by the
conventions I see around me, and then I find myself doubting. I suppose this is
because he who seeks a Stoic life pursues a transformation within the self,
while the ways of the world encourage a dependence on everything outside the
self. Sometimes, all the show and the bravado of grasping men can make me
question my commitment.
And if I happen to have my head on
straight, all I need to do is remember how absurd and ridiculous the ways of
fame, wealth, and power really are, and how low I will need to stoop if I
follow that path. Few things help me more than having a good laugh at my own
expense.
If I wish to build my reputation for
its own sake, then I will need to surrender my character in favor of making the
right impression. The sort of people whose attention I seek will themselves
admire status and appearance, and they will be pleased by veneration and
flattery. Let the games begin! There is that perverse grappling to make it to
the top of the heap, to be the first to be noticed, to tell the most convincing
and impressive lies, to satisfy the vanity of bloated and self-important men.
What will all of this posturing get
me? Access to bigger and better trinkets and playthings. So while half of me is
busy sucking up to the big man, the other half is keeping watch over a growing
pile of loot. The dog begs for the bone, and then he guards it jealously.
And throughout the whole process, I
will have to sell my soul. I will have to lie, cheat, steal, betray, and
generally become a vile and shifty person. I am trying to impress all the wrong
people, in order to acquire more useless possessions, all the time neglecting
everything noble within me, the only things that could really make me whole to
begin with.
A witty friend of mine once observed
how rich, spoiled, and vain people would always pretend to be enjoying
themselves at parties and nightclubs, but you just had to watch the forced and
painfully awkward way they danced to remember that you never wanted to become
like them. I can do much the same when I need to knock some sense back into
myself. I can stand back for a moment, and recognizes how foolish all those
silly contortions really are, how empty all that begging for influence and position
makes me.
All of it will be gone before I know
it, and so much of it is already gone. How vain to think that fame is lasting,
that wealth is reliable, that power is permanent.
Sic
transit gloria mundi. So passes the glory of the world.
Written in 8/2007
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