—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 8 (tr
Long)
I will regularly
get flak for encouraging Stoic thinking, sometimes because I’m not explaining
it properly, but at other times because people choose to misunderstand it. I no
longer know how many times, for example, I’ve been told that Stoicism is cold
and emotionless, or that Stoicism denies pleasure, or that Stoicism simply
means not caring.
I can only
remind myself that Stoicism has allowed me the greatest pleasures, and helped
me to embrace my emotions, and demanded of me that I care for others as deeply
as I care for myself.
Another one of
these misconceptions is that Stoics despise wealth, or renounce possessions, or
condemn worldly prosperity. Not at all. The sincere Stoic, at least of the
traditional variety, is instead indifferent to these things, because they are not
the measure of a good life. He neither desires them for their own sake, nor
rejects them for their own sake. To be indifferent to something in the Stoic
sense is not to consider it worthy or unworthy in itself, but to find worth
either in its presence or its absence.
I squirm a bit
when I see hipster Stoics use indifference as a way to be dismissive, and then
I must correct myself by fixing my squirming instead of trying to fix anyone
else.
A man is not
better or worse because he is rich or poor; his character will shine through
under either condition.
Has Fortune
given me opulence and luxury? Yes, I will take it, and I may even prefer it or
not prefer it, but I will not allow it to define me. It is an occasion, like
any other, to practice the art of living well.
Has Fortune
given me simplicity and poverty? Yes, I will take it, and I may even prefer it
or not prefer it, but I will not allow it to define me. It is an occasion, like
any other, to practice the art of living well.
I have known
poor men who want to be rich, and rich men who want to be poor, even as every
good man I’ve ever known will be content with either condition. Yes, this is
foolishness to the man who merely lusts for himself. It is also wisdom to the
man who truly loves himself.
If something
comes my way, I should accept it with humility. When something is taken away, I
should continue as if nothing was different, with no resentment or demands.
What I have is not who I am. Who I am should make noble use of anything I have, as
much as of anything I do not have.
Written in 4/2008
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