See
that you secure this present time to yourself; for those who rather pursue
posthumous fame do not consider that the men of after time will be exactly such
as these whom they cannot bear now, and both are mortal.
And
what is it in any way to you if these men of after time utter this or that
sound, or have this or that opinion about you?
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 8 (tr
Long)
I have always
loved wandering through towns all over the world, not following some guidebook
that tells me where all the important sites are, but rather finding the obscure
corners, those wonderful places off the beaten path that show human life for
what it really is, in all of both its wonder and its grime.
On those
journeys I have stumbled across overgrown thickets that were once pristine parks,
crumbling buildings that were once mansions, and, perhaps the ones that move me
the most, statues and monuments erected to immortalize people now long
forgotten. Pull back the ivy, rub away the dirt from the inscription, and you
uncover snapshots of past worlds.
Some people
suggest that this would make them quite sad, and that my odd hobby might even be
rather pathetic, but I am not driven by melancholy or a romantic yearning for
the past. I am rather inspired by learning how the human condition is so much
the same at all times, even as each individual expression of human life is only
for a very brief time.
I suppose there
can be a certain sense of power, of immortality, in wanting to be remembered.
We become so accustomed to this goal of extending the mark of our existence as
long as possible, and so we think it tragic when such efforts fail. But there need
be no loss or sadness here, because the dignity of human life is never measured
by what other people think or say, and it is never measured by what may or may
not happen after a span of life has passed.
The dignity of living
is the living itself, and Nature has given this a proper limit. There is a
perfectly good reason the Stoic is not afraid of death, or cares nothing for
fame, or is unimpressed by fancy posturing. He understands that each moment can
be a perfect and complete present, the fullness of life. The weight of the past
and the worry for the future do not need to define it.
“But it is
gone!” Yes, it is gone. And look how glorious it was! It needs no encore beyond
what it was, when it was.
“But I won’t
matter anymore!” Yes, of course you will still matter, but not perhaps in the
way that you expect. Whether or not there is any further recognition has
nothing at all to do with your significance and worth in the order of things.
Am I living well
right now, the only thing within my power? The rest is just a diversion.
Written in 4/2008
No comments:
Post a Comment