If
you have ever seen a hand cut off, or a foot, or a head, lying anywhere apart
from the rest of the body, such does a man make himself, as far as he can, who
is not content with what happens, and separates himself from others, or does
anything unsocial.
Suppose
that you have detached yourself from the Natural Unity—for you were made by Nature a part, but now you have cut yourself off—yet here there is this
beautiful provision, that it is in your power again to unite yourself.
God
has allowed this to no other part, after it has been separated and cut asunder,
to come together again. But consider the kindness by which He has distinguished
man, for He has put it in his power not to be separated at all from the
Universal. And when he has been separated, He has allowed him to return, and to
be united, and to resume his place as a part.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 8 (tr
Long)
Over the years,
what I have perceived as being the greatest pain, and what has fed the Black
Dog more than anything else, is my feeling that I have been separated from
others. This could take the form of being put down, ridiculed, or deceived by
people, but mostly I felt hurt by being shunned and ignored when I was no
longer thought of as being useful or convenient. Seeing myself abandoned by
someone else, I would assume I was somehow cut off from sharing in being human.
My mistake was
always the same. I believed that my fellows could exile me from living well,
when in fact their actions only divided them from humanity, and never actually did
anything to isolate me.
Even if they
chose to walk away, I could choose to stay right where I was. Even if they
chose to hate, I could still choose to love. Even if they chose to reject, I
could still choose to embrace. Only I can decide whether or not I will play my
part within the whole.
When Marcus
Aurelius speaks of man as a being by nature social, I never understand this in
the shallow sense of seeking to be liked, or winning affection, or playing for
status in some clever game. I understand it rather in the sense that as a
rational creature, I can freely choose to pursue what is good, and to
consciously share this with every other rational creature.
We are only
completely ourselves in cooperation with one another. Another may remove
himself from this harmony, but that absence should encourage me in my place all
the more.
And whenever I
have been so foolish as to cut myself off from the human whole, my reason and
choice can always still allow me to rejoin the human whole. What has been
broken can still be made right, since only my judgment needs to be altered to
restore my own contribution to the balance.
While I still
live, I can still return to the fold. I have today, but not necessarily
tomorrow, so let me do this while I can.
I was sometimes
confused by the urgency with which people working the Twelve Steps would commit
themselves to the Ninth Step, making amends to others. I came to understand
that a good part of this dedication followed from recognizing our
responsibility to rejoin the human family.
Written in 4/2008
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