There
is a reason for it.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 7 (tr
Long)
Yet another reference to Euripides.
Great wisdom and inspiration are to be found in the works of the Greek
tragedians, as their art, however grand in scale, mirrors so much of our daily
lives.
Depending on my attitude or mood, I
may read this passage in two different ways. Perhaps when life isn’t going my
way, the gods are angry with me, and so they are sending me an appropriate
punishment for my sins. Then I might need to put my house in order to get back
in their good graces.
Now Providence surely offers rewards
and punishments in many ways, means of both encouraging us to what is good and
discouraging us from what is bad, but I could also understand the principle on
a different level. It need not be about whether I am liked or disliked at all,
or on the naughty or nice list.
For the Stoic, every condition is an
opportunity for living well, and so whatever may happen is there for a
perfectly good reason. I may not understand it right now, and maybe I will
never understand it completely. Nevertheless, the presence or absence of
anything serves a purpose within the whole. It is my job to find the greatest
benefit for myself and for others within it.
Whatever my preference may be, the
gods will smile or frown as they should. Now what will I make of that, what
will I learn from it, how will I use it to improve myself? As Max Ehrmann said
it so nicely, “No doubt the Universe is unfolding as it should.”
Some people will question
Providence, or God, or Intelligence, or whatever we may wish to call it,
because they become frustrated when things seem to go wrong, when their desires
are not satisfied, or when their expectations are not met. They may think it
unjust, and I understand completely. I have been there many times.
Yet whenever I am pulled in that
direction, I try to remember that fairness is not measured by whether the Universe
gives me what I want. With apologies to Mick Jagger, it gives me what I need.
If I approach my life thinking that
good and bad are in my circumstances, then yes, life seems quite unfair. But
if, like a Stoic, I approach my life thinking that the good and bad for me are
in my estimation and action, then everything in life is, in this sense, fair.
If it pleases, I may embrace it, and if it hurts, I may confront it and
transform it.
Things don’t go wrong for me. I
choose to go wrong with things.
Consider it as literally or
symbolically as you like, but every one of those thunderbolts hurled by Zeus
always hits right on the mark, whether it gives or it takes away.
Written in 12/2007
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