Turn
the body inside out, and see what kind of thing it is; and when it has grown
old, what kind of thing it becomes, and when it is diseased.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 8 (tr
Long)
An unexpectedly
pleasant side-effect of trying to think and live like a Stoic has been that I
find it more and more difficult to think of anything in Nature as ugly; what
strikes me as ugly now is the turning away from Nature.
At the same
time, I also increasingly recognize how passing, how fragile, and how
unassuming so many things are that we usually treat with such great honor. We
look at the human body, for example, and are so full of admiration and praise
for its glory and beauty, and we are so caught up in all the image and
romance, that we forget it is a weak and disposable shell, no more exciting
than a bag of giblets.
We speak so
often of how much we want to enjoy the body of another, to have all of our
desires satisfied in its possession, consumed with an overwhelming lust. Would
it still be so attractive if we were looking at the insides instead of the
outsides? Is it suddenly a different body?
We describe
eyes, or lips, or cheeks, or any number of the curves of the body with such
noble language, but only when they are fresh and young. If the very same things
are old, we suddenly say they are “gross”. Remember, however, that “gross” can
not only mean undesirable or crude, but also more broadly means anything
material. All matter is in a state of dying even as it is living.
We may compare
the body of the athlete to the body of the sick man, and we will write poems
about the strength and power of one, and turn away in disgust from the decay
and stench of the other. Yet each body is really not so different from any
other at all, and each body could become like any other before we know it.
There is no permanence in either health or disease.
What is genuine
here, and what is simply provided by my own delusion, from my own imaginings?
I once thought
a girl looked like a perfect goddess, until I saw here vomiting in an alley.
I was once
intimidated by the chiseled good looks of a fellow, until I saw him crying over
a broken arm.
I once
unexpectedly caught an image of myself in a mirror, and without that brief
moment to make my countenance seem presentable, I saw how worthless and empty I
really looked.
What I am
usually calling beautiful or ugly, attractive or disgusting, even strong or
weak, isn’t about Nature at all, but about my own confusion concerning what is
truly good in life. I am letting my sense of the real be swept aside by shallow
appearance.
Written in 3/2008
No comments:
Post a Comment