The
gods who are immortal are not vexed because during so long a time they must
tolerate continually men as they are, and so many of them bad. And besides
this, they also take care of them in all ways.
But
you, who are destined to end so soon, are you wearied of enduring the bad, and
this too when you are one of them?
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 7 (tr
Long)
I will find myself so easily drawn
to complaining, especially when I see most everyone else busy complaining. The
only motive I can really discern within myself is the desire to feel that I
must be right by means of pointing out how everyone else is wrong, or that I
must be good because everyone else is bad. Perhaps, I think, I can seem
superior by making others appear to be inferior.
Whatever another may be in himself,
however, really says nothing at all about me, and as soon as I accuse him,
berate him, or insult him, it changes nothing about his character, even as it
changes quite a bit about my character. I am annoyed by someone doing evil, and
by doing so I have only let evil into my own soul.
Two things can help me here: knowing
that this too shall pass, and recognizing that I myself am a very part of the
problem.
If I remember that what I choose to
find an annoyance is hardly permanent, is not the end of the world, and is far
less important than I am making it, them I will have made it far less threatening
in my estimation. If I see it as only one tiny aspect of the whole, I have, in
a sense, thought it out of significance for me.
I can put it all into perspective.
To me, right here and now, something may seem quite terrible, but in the grand
scheme of things, in the order of Providence, it too has its place. Even this
minuscule irritation exists for a purpose, and if I can consider the purpose,
it will precisely cease to be an irritation to me.
Furthermore, let me hold a mirror to
myself. I gripe about what is wrong, but I should also observe how often I am myself
wrong. Would I then wish to be yelled at, or would I prefer to be helped? How
am I making what is wrong into something right, or am I actually just making it
even more wrong by my arrogance and resentment?
I can let myself become angry when I
see ignorance, carelessness, greed, or deception. I am then left with the exact
same ignorance, carelessness, greed, or deception in others, and I have
compounded the problem by adding my own rage to the picture. I am better served
if I reply with wisdom, concern, charity, or integrity. Then I have made myself
better, and there is even a chance I might assist someone else in becoming
better.
Look what we have done with the
Internet revolution. With all those means available to us, we actually seem to
understand less, and complain more. The next time I read something posted out
of ignorance or malice, I really don’t need to try and “fix” it by being
offended.
Written in 1/2008
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