What are these men's leading principles, and about what kinds
of things are they busy, and for what kind of reasons do they love and honor?
Imagine that you see their poor souls laid bare. When they
think that they do harm by their blame, or good by their praise, what an idea!
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 9.34 (tr
Long)
Many people in
this world will try to make you feel small, and they will usually do so because
they themselves want to feel big. As difficult as it may seem, do not measure
yourself by their standards, but rather look at who they truly are, as is
revealed by the character of what they say and what they do. Compare this to
the measure of Nature.
You will find
that they are not all they make themselves out to be. When they praise
themselves in public, you know that you are dealing with arrogant men. When
they speak fine words but act with malice, you know that you are dealing with
dishonest men. When they continually take and take without any giving anything at
all, you know that you are dealing with greedy men.
This becomes all
the more apparent when you discern toward what ends they commit most of their
time and effort. The fact that they spend so much time in church or at public
events should not mislead you, because they do that in their own service, to be
revered. Trust the man who does what is good for others, never expecting to be
revered.
See them as
they are, not as they would wish us to see them. Observe how they try to hurt
others with their words and deeds, or shame their enemies, or insist that it is
always someone else’s fault. Observe how they lift up their lackeys, or give
favors to their supposed friends, but only as long as it remains convenient.
Indeed, what an
idea! Consider the self-conceit, and you need consider no more!
Who have I just
described to myself? If I have any part in it, I know exactly where the work
needs to be done. Justice starts right here at home. When I in turn see this in
others, my challenge is not to twist the call of loving them into even more
hatred.
There is a
certain nastiness in sounding righteous while at the same time being terribly
self-righteous. At one point in my past life I became quite a master of that
skill, having followed all the wrong folks, and deciding that I would somehow
make myself better by being full of piss and vinegar.
No good ever came
from it, and no good will now ever come from it. If I spend my time being
resentful, and putting down anyone who rubs me the wrong way, I have already
laid bare exactly who I am. What I may have called strength was a pathetic
weakness, and what I may have called conviction was the most puerile posturing.
Show me what
anyone does in his daily life, regardless of his professional persona. There
will be found real humanity, in all its successes and failures, stripped of all
the illusions.
Written in 12/2008
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