Whatever
man you meet with, immediately say to yourself: What opinions has this man
about good and bad?
For
if with respect to pleasure and pain, and the causes of each, and with respect
to fame and ignominy, death and life, he has such and such opinions, it will
seem nothing wonderful or strange to me if he does such and such things; and I
shall bear in mind that he is compelled to do so.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 8 (tr
Long)
Instead of only looking at what
people do, I am best served by also understanding how they think. I may find
myself surprised by their actions, but this is far less likely if I have a
heads up on their motives.
I cannot know what is deep in their
hearts and minds, of course, and people can have a way, both wonderful and
frightening, of changing their ways, but more often than not, what they are
going to do is already clear from what they have revealed about their values.
What have they shown about their
sense of right and wrong? How do their passions affect them? Do they follow
after what others may think, or does conscience lead them? Do they simply want
to live, or do they care more for living well?
It can take quite some time to truly
know someone, but I am amazed at how quickly a man’s most basic principles
become apparent. I may have chosen not to look carefully, or I may have brushed
aside what was actually quite clear to me, but I have usually had it within my
power to know what made him tick.
I could have known, but I chose not
to know, and then I acted all hurt and betrayed, insisting that someone had
fooled me, when I had only fooled myself.
When I see someone who is full of
himself, who manipulates, gossips, complains, demeans, or holds a grudge, I am
already quite privy to what he cares about. That I cannot expect love from him,
or loyalty, integrity, self-control, justice, or compassion should already be clear.
Two great benefits will follow from inquiring
into the opinions of others. First, once again, I have a good hunch about what
is coming my way, but also second, I myself will be more able to act from sympathy
instead of anger. If I understand why they act, I will be aware of how they saw
some good within it, however mistaken they may be. I am hopefully then more
inclined to help than I am to hurt.
How much happier would I be if I had
only decided not to commit my trust to someone untrustworthy, or refused to
follow ideologues who said one thing but did another? If I had just looked
carefully, I would have saved myself the grief. The past can’t be helped,
however, even as I have learned for the present.
Written in 2/2008
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