—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 7 (tr
Long)
I have spent too much of my life thinking
that all of the obstacles, from the smallest inconveniences to the most
crippling of burdens, have an annoying way of showing up when I would least
want them. At first, I find this unfair, and I wonder why Providence seems to
make it harder when it should all be easier.
“Look at her!” I say to myself,
“Never as much as a hangnail to get in the way!”
“Look at him!” I say to myself,
“Always finding the profitable way out, and the rest of us sit in the dirt!”
I am, however, my own problem here,
because I am confusing the proper sense of benefit and harm. A good life is
never a life of ease and comfort. A good life is one of conviction and
character. The reward is in the doing, not in the receiving.
Perhaps I can learn to appreciate jarring
and unwanted bumps in the road. Perhaps Providence has actually done me a favor
by presenting a challenge. What will become of me if I rely on convenient
circumstances? I will end up lazy, entitled, and bloated with all that I have
consumed.
I share in intelligence, but I am
not the sum of all Intelligence. If it has happened, I can trust that it is
right, even as I cannot see all ends. It was given to me for a reason, and it
is my job to discover the worth within it, and to unearth the beauty and joy underneath it all.
Don’t always give me what I might
want, in whatever moment of passion, but always give me what I need, so that I
might become better.
He who dances, for all of his glory,
follows his own routine, and with grace and skill is the master of his own
motions. He who wrestles does much the same, while also being prepared for the
attack he could not have predicted. He is ready, prepared for whatever may
come, however much of a surprise it may seem. He stands firm, knowing that he
must be on his guard for something unknown.
So while I complain about the
frustrations of circumstance, or the scheming of my enemies, I should rather be
grateful. It isn’t a frustration at all, and he isn’t an enemy at all. All of
it is an opportunity, not to conquer the world, but to conquer myself.
Written in 1/2008
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