—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 8 (tr
Long)
When I am being
prideful, this seems like totally unnecessary advice. Of course I should be
active, thoughtful, committed, in harmony with myself and my world, and taking
the time to smell the roses. What fool would think that this isn’t the right
way to go?
And yet I will
fail to do any of this, time and time again, because I am not living my own
life, but coasting through my own life.
Yes, I suspect
you know that you’ve done it as well, and far more often than you’d like to
admit.
It may somehow
seem easier, or more convenient, to just shut myself off, and to let others
make my decisions for me. I don’t even require any particular person telling me
what to do, since it is enough to just go with the general flow of fashion and
power.
Get a fancy
degree? Make money? Look important? Pose for the photographs? Say all the right
things, while doing absolutely nothing? Check.
I observe how
we all say that we are so busy in our lives, and I will reflect on how the
worldly needs of life are so much easier than they have ever been, but yet we
say that we have no time at all for anything else. We obsess about the
deadlines at work, paying the bills, the cocktail parties, trucking the
children from one pampered activity to another, and above all else, making
ourselves look like we are so very brilliant. Is that actually being busy, or
is it busywork?
I am getting
busy with all the wrong things. I am doing much, but I understand less. I look
to what is around me, while I neglect what is within me.
I need to put
my priorities in order, and dedicate myself to all the right things. When I am
busy with the good life, rightly understood, I will actually find the leisure
to rest in genuine joy and contentment.
Living with
justice and compassion actually takes very little time, and can become almost
effortless with the right frame of mind. The habits of virtue take care of
themselves, if only we choose to love the right things in this world.
Once I manage
all of the essentials, that will leave me so much of an opportunity to savor
all the rest of life. No, the essentials are not fame and fortune. All that is
essential is living in truth and love.
If I am too
busy to be thoughtful, brave, moderate, or fair, I’m in the wrong business. If
I do not have time to love my friends, where has my time truly gone?
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