Wipe
out the imagination. Stop the pulling of the strings. Confine yourself to the
present.
Understand
well what happens either to you or to another. Divide and distribute every
object into the formal and the material.
Think
of your last hour. Let the wrong that is done by a man stay there where the
wrong was done.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 7 (tr
Long)
For me, the suggestions in this
passage have always been tied together by an urgent need for clarity of
purpose. I should remove the extraneous, all the diversions and obstacles
within my thinking, so that the simple yet profound meaning of living can be
revealed.
I am always being bombarded with
images, with appearances of what seems pleasant or unpleasant, desirable or
frightening. I must not let these impressions rule me. I must learn to rule
them.
I can do nothing about what has
happened in the past, because it no longer exists, or about what will happen in
the future, because it does not yet exist. The only power that is firmly mine
is ruling my own thoughts and actions in the present.
Circumstances and events may seem
entangled and confused, their meaning and value unclear to me. All I must do is
to focus only upon what something is within itself, not upon what is added by
my own worry or imaginings.
For me to know something is not to merely
have a vague sense of how it may feel. I must apprehend the identity that makes
it, and the parts out of which it is made. I can never really face, or find benefit from,
something I do not understand.
If I can only think of this very
moment as if it were my last, not as an exercise in morbidity but as a test of
my character, I can also remain dedicated to living well simply for its own
sake, without adding any conditions or further expectations.
Whenever I am confronted with what
is wrong within another, I do not need to let it enter into me. It can remain
exactly where it started, and I can use it to transform myself into something
right. “The buck stops here.”
Life only becomes as hard, or as
perplexing, or as discouraging as I allow it to become. The tools necessary for
living well are already present within me. Judgment, choice, and action
committed to living according to Nature, and nothing beyond that, are all that
is needed, and the less attention I pay to distractions, the richer my life
will be.
I don’t need to let myself be pulled
by strings.
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