One
man is born, another dies.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 7 (tr
Long)
The reference here again is to
Euripides. One of the things I have worked toward in my own journey through
Stoic philosophy is the joyful acceptance of change as something inherently
good in the order of Nature.
I will, unfortunately, still hold on
to past wrongs, simply because of the weakness of my own thinking, and that is
still a work in progress. I do better with it on some days, exactly when I
remember a maxim like this, and I do worse on other days, when I choose to
forget it.
At those times when I am forgetful,
I find it helpful to insist to myself that change is hardly a harmful thing. I
reflect upon the great benefit within it, and seek to recognize that the only hurt
within it comes from my own preferences and attachments. It is only bad for me
when I permit it to be.
Things come into a specific
existence, and they fall out of a specific existence. As foolish as they may
sound, I keep a few of my own phrases handy to strengthen my resolve:
Change
is action. The very act of doing involves a
transformation, in any and every form. Life is not a static state, but a
constant motion.
Change
is growth. Nothing comes from nothing, but
something comes from something else. Things gain in the fullness of existence,
and then transfer that fullness onward.
Change
is improvement. Where there is growth, there is a
struggle to increase in perfection. Yet it will not remain standing still.
Change
is rebuilding. Whatever has been strives to be
most fully itself, and then is reconstituted into another instance of striving.
Change
is renewal. The old is reborn into the new,
and this is an expression of the deepest triumph. Nothing is defeated.
Everything lives again.
Change
is eternal. I do not claim to know how
Providence intends for the Universe to play itself out, but I do know that as
long as there is life, there will be action and change.
I choose to embrace, and not to
fear, any sort of reaping.
Written in 12/2007
No comments:
Post a Comment