Different
things delight different people; it is my delight to keep the ruling faculty
sound without turning away either from any man or from any of the things that
happen to men, but looking at and receiving all with welcome eyes and using
everything according to its value.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 8 (tr
Long)
I’m always one
for being committed to what is true and good, and I am at the same time quite
wary of any sort of intellectual bullying. After all, I can hardly say that I
want other people to think for themselves, while simultaneously telling them exactly
what they must think. The truth should set you free, not make you my slave.
People will
seek joy in all sorts of ways. If they have come to know a better life, let me
be happy for them. If they have fallen into a worse life, let me suggest improvement
to them, not by dictating, but by the worth of my own example. Whatever I say
about happiness is meaningless if I myself am not living in happiness. Put your own house in order! Physician, heal
yourself!
So much of what
we believe will satisfy us seems to be built on the assumption of conflict. I
may think I need to always be fighting with myself, and to always be fighting
with other people. Now I will see that around me each and every day, and yet I don’t
see people finding any delight in this; they seem to be in a state of constant
anxiety.
Will it help if
I tell them how wrong they are, offering only another source of opposition and
strife? Or could I simply live in the way I find most delightful, hoping they
can see its merit for their own lives, while also being quite content if they
completely ignore me?
I don’t need to
be at war with myself. There is serenity within me when I choose to let reason
rule, when the inferior is ordered by the superior, the lesser measured
according to the greater. This means that I can only act for the good if I first understand
what is good, and the reasons why it is good. In this way, all circumstances
and all feelings can be of service to me, because I can know how they can be
directed to living well.
I don’t need to
be at war with others. If I can choose to rule myself, I can also respect the
manner in which others choose to rule themselves. Whether I believe they are
right or wrong, whatever they think and whatever they do only offers me a
greater opportunity to practice virtue for myself. They have their place in the
balance of all things, just as much as I have my place.
I try to
remember that a wise man, who surely will also be a loving man, and therefore
also a deeply contented man, will accept things as they are instead of casting
them aside, and will seek to find the good in things instead of dwelling upon
the evil. That is the sort of delight and serenity I’m seeking, where even a
cloudy or stormy day is a profoundly beautiful day.
Written in 4/2008
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