This is a
fine saying of Plato: That he who is discoursing about men should look also at
earthly things as if he viewed them from some higher place.
He should
look at them in their assemblies, armies, agricultural labors, marriages,
treaties, births, deaths, noise of the courts of justice, desert places,
various nations of barbarians, feasts, lamentations, markets, a mixture of all
things and an orderly combination of contraries.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 7 (tr
Long)
If I see the world only through the
lenses of my own feelings, my attractions and aversions, I am really only
seeing myself imposed on everything around me, and so everything will take on
the tint of my prejudice. Good and evil become what is pleasant or unpleasant
for me, right and wrong whatever is convenient or inconvenient for me.
There is a better way. I can move
beyond the influence of my own impressions, and I can take mastery over them. I
can try to see things not only as they are for me, but also as they are in and
of themselves. I can seek to find a loftier perspective, where I don’t just
notice this or that part, but I can appreciate a sense of the whole. Anything
that may have appeared as overwhelming, pointless, or unfair when viewed from
too close can now perhaps be seen in a proper context from further away.
When I can appreciate the order and
purpose of the relationships within all of Nature, so much of the frustration
and conflict I assumed can pass away. There are so many things in this world,
all distinct and different in their own way, but all of them play their own
part. There are so many changes happening at all times, the constant tension of
opposites, but all of them exist within a harmony.
As a child, I would always love
seeing the scenery from the top of a mountain, or the city from the top of a
skyscraper. There was a certain sense of awe in it, as well as of peace. In
later years, I would think of that line from Browning:
God's
in his heaven—
All's
right with the world!
Recently, my wife dropped me off at
the airport early one morning for a trip back to Boston. There was much worry
on my mind, about never seeming to be able to make ends meet, about how unhappy
my children seemed at their school, about all the nastiness, abuse, and petty
politics at my work. I was even concerned that another trip back to where I
grew up would wake up too many sleeping demons.
So I peered out the window as the
plane took off, and got lost in the view as we flew ever higher. I noticed
certain landmarks down below, and realized our path would take us straight over
the little town I now lived in. I could still see individual houses, and the
little colored specks of moving cars. I looked very carefully, and spotted my
own house, with our bright blue car in the driveway. They had already made it
home, and were surely having breakfast.
It was seeing that little corner of
my own life as a part of the much bigger world around it that helped me, then
and there, to understand and accept that world as it was, not merely as I would
desire it to be. A bit of height helped to give me that context.
Written in 3/2012
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