For
thus it is, men of Athens, in truth: wherever a man has placed himself,
thinking it the best place for him, or has been placed by a commander, there in
my opinion he ought to stay and to abide the hazard, taking nothing into the
reckoning, either death or anything else, before the baseness of deserting his
post.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 7 (tr
Long)
Continuing with his reference to
Plato’s Apology, Marcus Aurelius
points to the parallel between following one’s conscience and standing one’s
ground in battle. Now the analogy may seem a bit too masculine for some, but
there is certainly a common virtue at play, what can be called fortitude,
courage, or bravery, the willingness to confront what I fear for the sake of
what I know to be right and good.
Though my reflections can be deeply
confessional at times, sometimes to a fault, there are experiences in my life I
choose never to share any details of at all. In a few instances, I have faced
fear so powerful I thought it would melt me on the spot, and the very thought
of these times can still leave me as a trembling mess. What I have learned from
such terrifying impressions is the willingness to distinguish between what the
world can take from me, and what I can surrender of myself.
Sometimes I might be afraid of
shame, or of losing what I think are my rightful possessions, or of having my
freedom taken from me, or of pain, either physical or emotional, or even of
dying. What makes fear so powerful, I notice, is the expectation of what I
suspect is likely to happen next.
When I crushed my thumb as a child,
the worst part of it was actually looking at that squashed and mangled piece of
me, hardly recognizing it at all, and still feeling nothing at all. It was the physical
agony I knew would soon follow that scared me so much.
Oddly enough, when it did inevitably
follow, it was more bearable than the worry about it, and I suffered more from
the thoughtless babble by a nurse about possible amputation than I did from my
every nerve being on fire.
So what am I actually afraid of? The
prospect of losing something I care about, and the torture of continuing
suffering that seems to serve no purpose, and the crippling doubt about whether
I can manage to bear it.
I would probably have brushed this
off when I was younger, but I see that my conscious thinking often brings me
far more fear than any emotional instinct or physical feeling ever could. And
so I wonder, can I conquer my fear not merely by being toughened to pain, but
by being sound in my judgments?
If I look at what I might lose, what
my circumstances may take away from me, do I not see that this really has
little to do with me? If I look at the merit of my own choices and actions, do
I not see how this is so much more important?
So maybe I will be ridiculed, or
robbed, or locked up, or have my heart broken, or be tortured, or be killed.
What are they to me, since they can be done to me anyway, at any time?
But I can leave those things where
they are, for what they are, and still decide to do the right thing. That is entirely
up to me. My estimation will make all of the difference, about what matters
more, and about what matters less.
Courage doesn’t necessarily take a
big man. It takes a good man.
Written in 12/2007
IMAGE: William Barnes Wollen, The Last Stand of the Survivors of Her Majesty's 44th Regiment of Foot at Gandamak (1898)
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