He
who fears death either fears the loss of sensation, or a different kind of
sensation.
But
if you shall have no sensation, neither will you feel any harm; and if you
shall acquire another kind of sensation, you will be a different kind of living
being, and you will not cease to live.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 8 (tr
Long)
Good grief, I
do hate it when perfectly sound reasoning gets in the way of my perfectly good moping.
If I am afraid
of death because it will be the end, I literally have nothing to fear. If I am
afraid of death because it will be something else, then it isn’t really death
I’m afraid of at all, just something different.
That is why
Socrates suggested that we are only afraid of death because we are afraid of what
is unknown to us. If death means that my consciousness will cease, then I can
see that as a relief from suffering and worry, a well-earned respite from the
burdens of life. If death means going on to some other state of existence, then
I can see that as a wonderful opportunity.
I will admit,
however, that I have worried about how death may indeed be some sort of transformation,
but perhaps a terrible transformation into something far worse, something more
painful than I can imagine, something irredeemable. See, all that talk about
fire and brimstone gets me into some troubling thoughts.
But this is one
of those places where Stoicism is of such great comfort to me, because I can
know that no evil will ever befall me that I have not myself invited into my
life. I know this not simply out of some article of faith, or out of some
desperate hope, but from two of the most basic facts about life.
First, as
unclear as it may at times seem, I know that Providence will always act for the
sake of what is good. Whatever will happen, will happen for a reason, and that
reason is always subject to the purpose of the whole. There can be nothing bad
in anything being what it was made to be.
Second, as
frustrating as it may at times seem, I know that what is good for me, as a
creature of reason and choice, proceeds entirely from my own judgment and
action. Whatever may occur, however strange or powerful the conditions, will
always exist for me as an occasion to live with character.
That is my
happiness, that is my joy, and it can never be taken from me. Providence has
made me, and the world I live in, to be that way. Bad things won’t happen to
me, because nothing that “happens” is actually bad in and of itself, and
everything that “happens” can be ordered to good
This may seem
odd or ridiculous to some, but only to those who continue to measure the value
of life by the circumstances, and not by what is done with the circumstances.
My Black Dog
would like to distract me, by telling me that this hurts too much, or that will
never get better, or how I no longer have the power to rule myself. But the
Black Dog lies, and his power is only in doubt and confusion.
Socrates
expresses all of this beautifully in the Apology:
Wherefore, O judges, be of good cheer
about death, and know of a certainty, that no evil can happen to a good man,
either in life or after death. He and
his are not neglected by the gods; nor has my own approaching end happened by
mere chance.
Written in 6/2008
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