“A
cucumber is bitter.” Throw it away. “There are briers in the road.” Turn aside
from them. This is enough.
Do
not add, “And why were such things made in the world?” For you will be
ridiculed by a man who is acquainted with Nature, as you would be ridiculed by
a carpenter and shoemaker if you found fault because you see in their workshop
shavings and cuttings from the things that they make.
And
yet they have places into which they can throw these shavings and cuttings, and
the Universal Nature has no external space; but the wondrous part of her art is
that though she has circumscribed herself, everything within her that appears
to decay and to grow old and to be useless she changes into herself, and again
makes other new things from these very same, so that she requires neither
substance from without, nor wants a place into which she may cast that which
decays.
She
is content then with her own space, and her own matter, and her own art.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 8 (tr
Long)
This is one my
very favorite passage in Marcus Aurelius. It speaks directly to a
misunderstanding I must regularly overcome, one that I suspect is also an
obstacle for many others.
I may see
something in life that appears unfair, or broken, or painful, or inconvenient,
or simply unnecessary, and I may then wonder why such things are even allowed
to exist. If they are obstacles and hindrances, or just wasted, why would
Providence permit them?
At the very
least I will begin to complain about them, and my complaints can easily become
resentments. I think of all the times I have griped that it is too hot or too
cold, or that greedy and thoughtless people surround me, or that Nature would
dare to allow me to feel any sort of pain.
At the very
worst, I will transform my own frustration into a metaphysical conundrum. I
will use my dissatisfaction as an excuse to insist that the Universe can never truly
be subject to Providence, because there are bits I find to be a troublesome
burden. It can actually end up growing into the problem of how a loving God
could possibly permit the existence of evil.
Yet everything
is a part of the whole, and even what I might consider to be an evil will exist
so that out it may come a greater good. Nature never wastes anything, or
discards anything, or considers anything to be useless. If it exists, it exists
for a perfectly good reason, though I might not grasp this immediately through
my limited awareness, or through my stubborn insistence.
Is it an
obstacle to me? Then I can cast it aside, or walk around it, or even make
something worthy out of it, just like those proverbial lemons. Yet notice how
anything I do can do with something painful already gives me a chance to make
myself better, and so it has unwittingly served a wonderful purpose after all!
The cucumber
and the brier are what they are, and they are meant to be what they are. What I
am is measured by my own wisdom and virtue, by my power to do good, and not by
what other things do to me. I can still transform anything for my own moral
good.
And Nature herself
transforms everything, rebuilds it, and recycles it, so that nothing ever gets
thrown away. Is it just a leftover piece of junk, some residue, or a worn-out
part? Give it a moment. Before you know it, Providence will change it into
something else, and it will have a new lease on life. It passes away, and then
becomes new.
Without the
wood shavings the carpenter could never use his plane. And Nature is so thrifty
that even those shavings on the floor shall be put to a good use.
Written in 5/2008
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