Loss is nothing else than change.
But the Universal Nature delights in change, and in
obedience to her all things are now done well, and from eternity have been in
like form, and will be such to time without end.
What, then, do you say—that all things have been and all
things always will be bad, and that no power has ever been found in so many
gods to rectify these things, but the world has been condemned to be bound in
never ceasing evil?
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 9.35 (tr
Long)
Well yes, I
have sadly said exactly that to myself more times than I can count: the world
is a mess, everything dies, and the only necessary thing is to accept misery.
And why did I
say that, over and over? Because I wanted to surrender, because it seemed the easier
choice to fall down than to stand up, because I preferred blaming others to
taking a real responsibility for myself.
The world will
only seem bad when we see it backwards, when we confuse what we can give with
what has been given, when we replace life as a calling with life as an
entitlement. Will things happen to us that hurt? Yes, of course. Will they not,
however, always, without a single exception, also give us the opportunity to
live with virtue and with love?
Each and every
situation I have ever encountered asked me to live well, even when I denied it.
It will only
appear to be “bad” or “evil” when the very function of a free and rational
animal is reduced to that of a mindless beast, ruled by gratification. It is
natural for sheep to be sheep, but not for men to be sheep.
“But people do
terrible things!” Yes, now you yourself can do wonderful things.
“But others do
not treat me fairly!” Yes, now you yourself have the gift of being fair.
“But there is
death, and there is suffering, and there is loss!” Yes, there is change all
around us, but you have it within your power to make your own change, for the
short time that you live, to be an expression of your own compassion and
concern.
Absolutely
nothing is taken from us when the world changes around us, since we can
consistently maintain an attitude driven by conscience and character while we
still live.
This may not be
character of the sweeping and epic sort, but it never needs to be; a humble and
unassuming variety will do just fine. True heroes don’t necessarily change
everything around them, even as they have the power to change themselves to the
core.
There are many
things I may think I have lost over the years. I may think I lost the dearest friendship,
or I may think I lost a child, or I may think I lost the opportunities for
being important, rich, and admired. Lately, I tend to worry that I will lose my
very life before it’s rightful time. None of that was ever lost, or ever will
be, because it was never mine to begin with.
My challenge to
myself, which I will often resist with much kicking and screaming, is to
recognize that nothing that is good for me can be taken away. I will only
comprehend this when I in turn accept myself as a creature of action, not
merely one of passion.
I will probably
not win by playing the game of circumstances, even as I will always win by
following the calling of virtue. That is true for each and every one of us.
There is no failure, or evil, we do not choose for ourselves.
Nature works as
it does for a very good reason, and it is my task to discover this instead of
throwing a tantrum. I choose to trust in Providence.
A change is
never an injustice; a change is an expression of growth and of transformation. Of
course all these things end, but I decide who I will be in the face of those endings.
Written in 1/2016
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