To
my own free will, the free will of my neighbor is just as indifferent as his
poor breath and flesh.
For
though we are made especially for the sake of one another, still the ruling
power of each of us has its own office, for otherwise my neighbor's wickedness
would be my harm, which God has not willed, in order that my unhappiness may
not depend on another.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 8 (tr
Long)
Sharing in the
same rational nature, we are indeed made to cooperate, to work with and for one
another, to participate together in what is good. Yet cooperation should never
to be confused with dominance, and I am not made to be the master over someone
else’s judgment, just as he is not made to be the master over my judgment.
Think of how
often we will insist on trying to violently rule others according to our own
wills, and consider also how much suffering and grief we bring onto ourselves
by doing so.
If another knows
better than I do, and is able to live better than I do, let him assist me, and
let him advise me, and let him guide me by his own example. If I were one day to
find myself wiser or more virtuous than another, I would be called to do
exactly the same. Force and coercion will only hinder a man on the outside, but
will not help him to improve himself on the inside.
I must
remember, of course, that being indifferent to the choice of another, as with
any circumstance beyond myself, isn’t about not caring. It means rather that
whatever anything may be in and of itself, it is only good or bad for me
according to what I make of it to improve my own character.
I should most
certainly want my fellows to live well, and to thereby be happy, as I would hope
they would also want for me; I cannot do that for them, and they cannot do that
for me.
How often have
we heard people say that they can’t be happy without someone else doing this or
that, or that they must work ceaselessly to “make” someone else happy?
As disturbing
as it may seem, no one else ever makes anyone else better. No one else ever makes
anyone else happier. No one else ever saves any other man. We might be an
opportunity to be of help to others, but we are never the agents. Only an individual
choice, deep within the self, can ever do that.
“But I will
make him change!” No, you won’t. Only he can change himself. Walk with him,
hold his hand, and encourage him as best you can, but you will not change him.
That is up to him.
We propose all
sorts of forms of government, suggesting democracy, aristocracy, or monarchy. Let us indeed ask ourselves what sort of circumstances can assist us in life,
and let us debate the good and bad in each. What sort of an organization will
help all of us, each and every one of us, to exist more fully?
In the end,
however, we are all of us, each and every one of us, kings and queens of our
own domains. It doesn’t take titles, or lands, or wealth. It requires only rule
over oneself.
There are as
many monarchs in this Universe as there are creatures of reason and choice.
Some will be tyrants, and some will be bringers of peace. That is all up to
them.
Behind all of
it, there is only one Supreme Monarch, who in infinite wisdom allows us to make
our own way, for better or for worse.
Written in 6/2008
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