But
he who has failed in any one of these things could not even say for what
purpose he exists himself. What then do you think of him who avoids or seeks
the praise of those who applaud, of men who know not either where they are or
who they are?
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 8 (tr
Long)
Put on a
blindfold, and try to walk around a room, even one you have been around for
years and years. Now add a bunch of cats. And don’t forget to put in some
rocking chairs, just to make it more interesting.
This would seem
like a foolish thing to do, yet most of us do it every day. We have no idea
where we are, so we stumble our way through it all.
Get in your
car, and try to drive to a strange address that someone has given you. Don’t
look at a map. Don’t even bother to use your fancy phone to give you
directions. Just drive around randomly until you get where you need to go.
This would seem
like a foolish thing to do, yet most of us do it every day. We have no idea
where we are going, but we imagine we don’t need any help.
Pretend you are
going to a job interview, expecting some bigwig to ask you who you are. Give
him your resume, and tell him all about where you went to school, or name some prizes
you have won, or brag about how much someone else has paid you.
This would seem
like a foolish thing to do, yet most of us do it every day. Offer the
accidents, but avoid the essence. We have no idea who we are, so we provide
platitudes and excuses.
Where am I?
Where am I going? Who am I?
When was the
last time I answered these questions with insight and integrity? Or did I spout
out vanities, ways to make me seem like I was strong and confident, even as I
was ignorant and foolish?
Behind all of
this is really the most encompassing question: what is this world I live in? I can’t know where I am, where I am going,
or who I am without making some sense of the order of Nature. Purpose is only
possible within the context of the whole.
As if it
couldn’t get any worse, I somehow manage to compound my error. Instead of just
being a fool myself, a fellow with no idea why he is here, I go about seeking
the praise and approval of other people who have no idea why they are here.
They tell me
that a fool is a fellow who can’t play the game. I humbly suggest that a fool
is rather the fellow who can only play the game.
The philosopher
will ask himself these questions all of the time, but he is told that he is
insane. Not eccentric, mind you, because only a rich man can be eccentric; a
poor man is considered insane for asking those very same questions.
Yet truly, if I
am unable to explain to myself where I am, where I am going, who I am, and how
I fit into the order of the world, I’m not really much of anything at all. I am
just flotsam and jetsam.
Written in 5/2014
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