Let there be freedom from perturbations with respect to the
things that come from the external cause.
And let there be
justice in the things done by virtue of the internal cause, that is, let there
be movement and action terminating in this, in social acts, for this is
according to your nature.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 9.31 (tr
Long)
I will often
employ foolish little trinkets, signs, images, or phrases to help me get back
on track. To this day, for example, I will deliberately look at a little glass
bird someone gave me many years ago. It’s a nice piece of work, but the person who
gifted it back then decided I was entirely disposable. It reminds me that
people will not always keep their promises.
For me, this is
now a good thing, a recognition of what trust is truly meant to be. Like
viewing that figurine, I also repeat certain words to myself when I feel that I
am about to break. I repeat to myself, often many times a day: “Take the Stoic
Turn.”
I don’t believe
in any magic to certain expressions, and I don’t think that a word says
anything beyond what it signifies. Still, words have power. To “turn” can mean
to revolve, to spin, to change direction, to move, to become something
different. To make a Stoic Turn, to me, means becoming a completely new person.
It means
looking at everything quite backwards from the way it was familiar. And what is
most familiar to us? We blame what happens to us, and we excuse what we do. We
say that the world is wrong, and that we are right. We define who we are by our
circumstances, and we forget our own character.
This, my
friends, is where we need that Stoic Turn. No one has done us wrong. The world
has never hurt us. The circumstances never make the man.
We only do
ourselves wrong. We only fail to love the world. We only make of the
circumstances what we will.
What the world
does, is precisely what the world does. I do not determine that, as much as I
might like to. What I do is what I do. I do determine that, as much as I might
not like to.
Take what comes
from the outside, and let it be what it is. Look at what comes from the inside,
and that is you, all you are, everything you are. Recognizing that is a Stoic
Turn.
Think of it
this way: you are not a victim, but you are a small creator.
That little
bird once made me angry; it now helps me to love, to be social in all the right
ways.
Written in 12/2008
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