You have endured infinite troubles through not being
contented with your ruling faculty, when it does the things that it is
constituted by nature to do. But enough of this.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 9.26 (tr
Long)
Unlike many of
the trendier philosophies and life hacks, Stoicism has no hidden terms or
mysterious conditions attached to it. Its effectiveness can quite easily be put
to the test, because what is good or bad in life will follow from our own
judgments and choices about what we think is worthy.
There is no requirement
to wait for anything else to happen, or to set up a certain situation just so,
or to hope for a change in the weather. Since our happiness is something under
our control, there is never a need to second-guess ourselves.
In other words,
if Stoicism doesn’t seem to be working for me, it’s only because I’m not
letting it work, and I am still allowing circumstances to make my decisions for
me. Can it be difficult to change my thinking and attitude? It most certainly
can, but I can be confident that the only obstacles are right there within my
own habits. I can change those habits if I only so choose, if I think it is
really important enough to me.
I need to be
completely honest with myself, of course, even brutally honest, since I can’t
just pretend to change, to give the appearance without the actual commitment. If
the decision is made, however, there is absolutely no reason I need to be laid
low by anything; it may indeed be painful, but the pain doesn’t have to make or
break me.
Another aspect
of that honesty is asking myself what the causes of my grief in life have
really been. I may try to squirm my way out of it, because it seems easier to
blame someone or something else, yet I find, time and time again, that my
misery has always been of my own making.
It’s not that I
necessarily created the circumstances, even as I was certainly the one who
decided they were so critical for me. It should come as no surprise, therefore,
that when I didn’t get what I told myself I needed, I would then be
heartbroken.
The burdens in
my life were only heavy because I gave them weight, and the losses were only unbearable
because of what I gave value. If I consider my life to be good only when I act
with wisdom and virtue, then no way that I am being acted upon will make my
life bad. If I am content with myself, with my power to be my own master, I
will be satisfied, seeking nothing beyond myself.
If I’ve had
enough of the endless longing, and the uncertainties, and the playing of games,
then I can stop caring for all the wrong things. That is only my call, and I can
decide at any moment that enough is enough.
Written in 11/2008
No comments:
Post a Comment