With
food and drinks and cunning magic arts
Turning
the channel's course to escape from death.
The
wind which heaven has sent
We
must endure, and toil without complaining.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 7 (tr
Long)
The Philosopher-Emperor continues to
have a thing for Euripides, and I can hardly blame him. A good tragedy can do
much to cleanse the soul.
Now how much of my time have I
wasted in improving the health of my body, with all sorts of cures and
treatments, costing me many and many thousands of dollars? And yet how much have I
committed to my soul, the health of my character?
I had honestly lost count when a
dentist told me he would gladly fix my broken front tooth, but that he could
also make me more beautiful and attractive by rearranging and rebuilding my
entire mouth.
“You’ll look great! Think of how it
will change you life!”
I took a deep breath. “How will
pretty teeth change me? I’m a geek, a nerd, a hideous dork. My teeth feel fine.
Just fix that front one so I can chew, and I’ll be happy.”
He wouldn’t give up, perhaps
thinking I was a sucker for that sort of thing. “Women like good teeth!” he
said
“Not the women who interest me, not
at all. If a woman loves me for my smile, she’s hardly a good woman.”
He frowned and gave up, and then
fixed the broken tooth. To this day, it sits crooked, but it does exactly what
Nature made it to do. It helps me to bite off my food.
Look at all of the magic arts we
appeal to in order to improve our lives, and all of the magic arts we use to
lengthen our lives. One day it wasn’t about teeth anymore. It was about surviving.
“Look, we can put you on some great
drugs, and there are all sorts of surgical options. I’m going to suggest we
place you on the surgical schedule right now.”
“Why?”
I’ve never seen a more dumbfounded
look in my life. “So you can live longer, obviously!”
“Why do I need to live longer? Is it
worth months of living like a vegetable in bed, only to end up dying just a bit
later in any event, and leaving my family with crippling medical bills?”
The poor fellow was aghast. “But you
might live for a few more years. . . “
And there’s the thing. We fight
against Nature to make ourselves younger and prettier, and we fight against
Nature to make ourselves survive for just a little bit more. All the time, we
are forgetting that this is not the most important struggle.
Written in 2/2017
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