Take
me and cast me where you wish; for there I shall keep my divine part tranquil,
that is, content, if it can feel and act conformably to its proper
constitution.
Is
this change of place sufficient reason why my soul should be unhappy and worse
than it was, depressed, expanded, shrinking, frightened? And what will you find
which is sufficient reason for this?
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 8 (tr
Long)
During what I
call my Wilderness Years, where I allowed myself to be overwhelmed by
loneliness and despair, I made a number of frantic efforts to keep myself
afloat. At one point, I dropped all my academic pretensions, and sought out
work that might better serve my soul.
I stumbled
across a chance to work in Catholic social services, and I jumped at it. Asked
which particular ministries interested me, I immediately chose AIDS patients and
prisoners. At that time, those who suffered from AIDS were largely considered
pariahs, just as those doing jail time still are to this day.
I somehow
figured, quite selfishly perhaps, that if I could work around that sort of
suffering, where others will barely consider you to be human, it might help me
to come to terms with my own suffering.
What I did not
expect was the degree to which the experience would affect me, and how it
continued changing me for years afterwards. I was forcefully pulled out of all
my first-world problems, and shown the bare bones of how other people face real
pain.
I slowly
observed that people weren’t made or broken by
suffering, but rather that they made or broke themselves through suffering. It wasn’t what happened to them, but what they
chose to do with what happened to them.
I hardly think
I ever helped anyone else, because I was really just a gofer, but many of those
people helped me. It was in hospitals and prisons that I saw both some of the
best and the worst in people; it was the judgment about circumstances that made
the difference.
The words of
Viktor Frankl, which had only been a profound abstraction before, were now
strikingly real:
The way in which a man accepts his fate and all the
suffering it entails, the way in which he takes up his cross, gives him ample
opportunity—even under the most difficult circumstances—to add a deeper meaning
to his life.
It
may remain brave, dignified and unselfish. Or in the bitter fight for
self-preservation he may forget his human dignity and become no more than an
animal.
Here
lies the chance for a man either to make use of or to forgo the opportunities
of attaining the moral values that a difficult situation may afford him. And
this decides whether he is worthy of his sufferings or not.
Wherever you
may put me, and under whatever conditions I must live, am I not still capable
of living with dignity and character? Yes, the outside may be chipped away, but
the inside can still flourish; in fact it can flourish all the more, because
greater hardship can actually offer an opportunity for greater virtue.
If I can
rightly understand what it is that gives my life meaning and value, the
excellence of my own attitude, I can recognize that I do not need to consider
any state of affairs to be too much to handle. The weight of circumstances and
the power of pain only have as much power as I permit them to have.
Do you choose
to treat me like an animal? You have made that choice. Now whether I choose to
also become like an animal, or thrive as a human being, is entirely my own
choice.
Written in 4/2008
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