The Universal Cause is like a winter torrent: it carries
everything along with it.
But how worthless are all these poor people who are engaged
in matters political, and, as they do, are playing the philosopher! All
drivelers.
Well then, man: do what Nature now requires. Set yourself in
motion, if it is in your power, and do not look about you to see if any one
will observe it; nor yet expect Plato's Republic, but be content if the
smallest thing goes on well, and consider such an event to be no small matter.
. . .
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 9.29 (tr
Long)
If I think I will
somehow have it only my own way, I must learn that I never will.
It isn’t just about
me, it was never just about me, and it will never be just about me.
Now I
understand that this might feel like a horrible put-down, one of the usual sort
of insults, minus any of the foul language or clever superiority. It feels a
bit like when someone tells me that I’m worthless.
But see, one of
these things is not like the other. It is no insult to tell any man that he is
not the center of the Universe; one actually does him a favor by reminding him
of the fact.
It isn’t that
you and I are worthless at all, but rather that we misunderstand our worth.
I consider
myself like one single snowflake, a part of a great winter storm. How long will
I last? It hardly matters in the bigger scheme of things. God makes the storm. God
is the storm. Do I melt away? Yes.
But I melt away with a vengeance, because all of it would never have happened
without me, or the countless others.
Now look at the
fancy folks. They are just snowflakes too, but they think they are the storm. See how they posture and
preen. They go about, tossed by the winds, while claiming that they determine
the winds.
“I made this. I
will fix this. I am better than you. I know what is right. I will tell you what
to do.”
Does that sound
too familiar? We have all heard it.
Philosophy,
according to Nature, is a man seeking to understand himself and his world.
Philosophy, according to the sinister players, is a man seeking to elevate
himself and to manipulate his world.
Some people
want big results, for the least effort. They strut about, and they say big
things, but they actually do no good at all. They act for their own glory.
And other
people commit their lives to the smallest things, never expecting impressive
gains. No one sees what they do, and yet they show unconditional love all the
same. They act for the glory of what is right and true.
No, the humble
people who get the job of life done are hardly noticed. The humble die, and the
vain folks look the other way. The vain folks die, and they expect to be given
a parade.
Let them have
their parades. Better for us to stick with having a conscience.
None of us are
the storm. We are all snowflakes, but that is still no small matter.
Written in 11/2008
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