Let
no man any longer hear you finding fault with the court life, or with your own.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 8 (tr
Long)
When I complain about the world
around me, what disturbs me is beyond my power to control, and so I only
frustrate myself. When I complain about myself, what disturbs me is completely
within my power, and so I have no need to become frustrated. The blame is
pointless in both cases. Let me correct what I can, and make the best of what I
cannot.
Someone once told me that anger was
a way of punishing myself for the mistakes of others. That helps me to put
myself right, even when I can’t put others right.
Now once I began to make a conscious
effort not to find fault, and instead simply to do good, I thought it would be harder
for me to stop blaming others, and easier to stop blaming myself. After all, I
usually go wrong by making too much of myself, and making too little of others.
To my surprise, I found the exact
opposite to be the case. Understanding others, accepting others, forgiving
others, even loving others, turned out to require less effort than
understanding myself, accepting myself, forgiving myself, and especially loving
myself. I was so used to casting resentment outwards, I wasn’t even aware how
much more I was casting inwards.
The greatest obstacle in my own
life, and the situation that most fed my Black Dog over many years, would give
me an excuse to swing back and forth between being angry at someone else and
being angry at myself. I have somehow managed to sufficiently tame the former
hatred, but I continue to struggle with the latter. I am still catching my
habits up to my thinking.
Perhaps I have come to rightly
accept that another’s past actions are something I can’t change, but I am still
somehow insisting that I can magically go back and change my own past actions.
I can’t do that either, of course, even as I can certainly change myself right here
and now. That doesn’t erase my past mistake, but it does break it down, rebuild
it, and transform it into something better.
I squirm and despair about what I
have done, and so I forget about what I can now do. Blame is not required, but
improvement is required. When the fault is removed, regret can pass away.
Let it be, or make it right. Accept
it, or change it. Knowing the difference between these two realms is really
about knowing the difference between what isn’t mine and what is mine. I think
it no accident that this is a form of the Serenity
Prayer in action. It is about taking responsibility for the right things.
Written in 2/2008
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