Another
may be more expert in casting his opponent; but he is not more social, nor more
modest, nor better disciplined to meet all that happens, nor more considerate
with respect to the faults of his neighbors.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 7 (tr
Long)
The wrestler may be stronger or more
skilled in the ring, but that does not make him the better man.
I think of all the different
qualities we admire in others, and then how we judge human merit based upon
such traits. We think highly of intelligence, wit, charm, and eloquence. We
stand in awe of physical beauty and prowess. We respect influence, position,
and authority.
Now all of these things can be used
for benefit, and they can also be used for harm. None of them will ever really
do us any good if they are not guided by moral character.
I think of all the different times I
was impressed by a woman’s elegance or a man’s toughness, the diligence of a
hard worker or the insight of a scholar, the raw power of an athlete or the
creativity of an artist.
Then I found that some of them were
hardly great at all, because their gifts were not driven by a conscience.
I think of all aptitudes given by
Nature and all the habits nurtured by practice, all the opportunities offered
by circumstances and all the chances given by Providence, and I see them as
wasted when they are separated from wisdom and virtue.
Without an awareness of true and
false, of right and wrong, and without the conviction to act without greed or
fear, they will have no value whatsoever. They are like the finest tools in the
hands of a man who doesn’t know the first thing about his craft.
Perhaps I have simply happened across
a few too many experiences that have discouraged me, and perhaps I am still too
much of pessimist, but I have seen too many people who choose not to inform
their inner voice, or who lack the courage to listen to it. There may not be a
drop of malice in them at all, but they too easily fail to reflect enough, or
don’t bother to care enough. And to be completely fair, I have been part of
that group too often.
I can develop all the potential talents
within me, and work hard at being successful in so many ways, even as “winning”
in life neither begins nor ends with such measures. As with so much in
Stoicism, and with so much in life, it is all about ordering the priorities of
what is absolute and what is relative.
Written in 12/2007
Thank you for these valuable insights into this passage!
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