Would
you wish to please a man who does not please himself?
Does
a man please himself who repents of nearly everything that he does?
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 8 (tr
Long)
It is odd
enough that we should be interested in defining ourselves by the respect of
others; it already reduces the value of people to the estimation of other
people. What is even more troubling is how often we further seek the approval of
people who are hardly worthy of such authority over us.
Plato famously
observed that those who are drawn to power and influence are precisely those
who least deserve to have them, since the very fact that they desire a life of
reputation reveals a neglect of the life of character. Even as they are so
committed to appearing a certain way on the outside, there is likely a
corresponding emptiness on the inside. They are grasping, filled with a longing
to possess other things, when they do not even posses themselves.
I did not see
this at first, but over time it became quite clear to me that those who pursue
the life of honor are quite often the most anxious, insecure, and frustrated
people you will ever meet. Don’t be fooled by the fine veneer, which is there
to compensate.
Should I really
seek the respect of someone who has no real respect for himself? Should I want
to be admired by a fellow who does not know how to find happiness within his
own soul, but feeds off the souls of others? Should I put people on pedestals
when they can’t even look at themselves in the mirror without feeling a sense
of shame?
This needs to
go both ways. I should be wary of others who measure life by trading in the
currency of praise, while I must also be wary of being seduced by this illusion
in my own thinking.
I have rarely
been in positions involving any real influence, but on the very few occasions
where I have been praised or admired, even in the slightest way, I could feel a
certain satisfaction in the attention. I found that the sensation could easily
become a diversion from doing the right thing for its own sake, to be slowly
but surely replaced with doing the popular thing for my sake.
So as
unpleasant as it may at first seem, I will often try to deliberately avoid being
seen doing something well. If it is at all possible, I choose to attempt
something virtuous in private, and not in public; I don’t always trust myself
not to desire the admiration for the deed, instead of just loving the deed.
How can I
possibly want to be thought well of by others, when I know that I am lying to
them? My character improves by being somebody, not being thought of as being
somebody.
Written in 5/2008
No comments:
Post a Comment