“Though Nero decked himself proudly
with purple of Tyre and snow-white gems,
nonetheless that man of rage and luxury
lived ever hated of all.
Yet would that evil man at times
give his dishonored offices to men who
were revered.
Who then could count men blessed,
who to such a villain owed their high estate?”
—from
Book 3, Poem 4
It is
all too easy to see how the love of money burdens our lives, both for those who
receive less than they deserve and for those who receive more than they
deserve. This was one of the first things I noticed when I started trying to
figure out why the world worked, or didn’t work, as it did.
But
right there alongside a greed for possessions, just as prevalent if not even
more so, is the desire for status, the groveling for honors and positions, and
the privilege to brag about how highly we are held in esteem. After all, our
money is of little use if we can’t show it off to impress others with our
importance.
Money
and honor seem joined at the hip. They are both symptoms of the greater problem
Lady Philosophy is trying to teach us about, making the value of our lives
dependent on what is outside of us instead of what is inside of us, on what
fortune does for us instead of what virtue does for itself.
And just
as we can shamefully be quite satisfied to receive riches without questioning
where and how we acquired them, we will also accept praises and titles without
considering the worth of those who grant them.
A few
years back, a few of my colleagues were up for tenure, that Holy Grail of the
shallow academic. It seemed that for an entire year they would do anything to
impress the committee, even as they would regularly put down those same members
when they were out of earshot.
“If you
think so very poorly of these terrible people,” I once asked, ‘why do you care
so much about the prizes they can bestow on you?”
There
was one of those awkward moments of silence. “Well, that’s just how the game is
played.”
Exactly.
It often does seem much like playing a game, of the sort where we will do
anything to win points, without actually wondering who hands them out, or if we
deserve to receive them, or if they are even worth winning at all.
Where is
the value in being praised by a rake, promoted by a scoundrel, or rewarded by a
tyrant? What is given will only be as noble or as base as the giver; an honor
from a Nero actually ends up being more of an insult.
It is
odd that so many of what we say are the best of people are actually the worst
of people, and yet we will still go about trying to impress them. I remind
myself that I am better served by finding contentment in the merit of what I do
than in the image of what others think of what I do.
Written in 9/2015
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