The rottenness of the matter that is the foundation of
everything!
Water, dust, bones, filth: or again, marble rocks, the
callosities of the earth; and gold and silver, the sediments; and garments,
only bits of hair; and purple dye, blood; and everything else is of the same
kind.
And that which is of the nature of breath is also another
thing of the same kind, changing from this to that.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 9.36 (tr
Long)
Many
philosophies can enlighten the mind and inspire the heart, but few
philosophies, I have found, can speak so deeply to daily practice as that of
the Stoics.
Whenever
anything seems to be so overwhelming, I can employ just one simple trick. I
must only ask myself, “What is it made of?”
The overall
image might be quite impressive, but I must only examine the parts that
constitute it. A charming house, but it is made of straw. A seductive smile,
but it’s the lipstick that gives it so much class. An imposing demeanor, but
without the expensive suit he’s just another old fat man.
All of it,
every single thing, is made of exactly the same sort of matter. None of it ever
stays in the same form, none of it is lasting, and none of it is invincible. It
is all weak, malleable, and corruptible. Yes, in and of itself, it is quite
pathetic. Look at all the bits that make it up, and it will no longer seem so
powerful. This is an incredibly effective way to put everything, and everyone,
in their rightful place.
I have seen
corpses three times in my life, not counting the plastic mannequins we view at
funerals. Each and every time I was certainly terrified how this vessel once
housed a soul, but most importantly I saw how fragile that vessel truly was.
A sight I can never
remove from my memory is that of a dead child with a smashed skull, just run
over by a car. Blood was still seeping onto the road, and the eyes were still
open. It haunts me, but it also informs me. I, too, am nothing more than that.
I am not made of iron, and I will be crushed as well. Even the iron in this
world will rust.
Look at the
boss who bullies you, or the so-called friend who insults you behind your back,
or the lover who has betrayed you. The outsides may intimidate you, but the
insides are made of the same organic mush that you are. It is hardly as big as
you think.
Look at the
threatening letters your bank sends you when you happen to be late on a payment
for this or that. The outsides may frighten you, but the insides are just paper
printed off from a lifeless machine, in turn produced from an algorithm written
by a pimply programmer. It is hardly as horrifying as you think.
Look at the
pain you have carried with you for years and years, because a certain event made
you doubt everything you held dear. The outsides may leave you hopeless, but
the insides are nothing more than things happening as they will happen, and
people doing what they will do. It is hardly as traumatizing as you think.
Pardon my
French, but all the big people also pass gas, stink of sweat, pick their dirty toenails,
have hemorrhoids, and are slowly dying from diseases they don’t yet know they
have, just like you and me.
All the big
things in life are slowly crumbling, falling apart moment by moment, and will
be ugly tomorrow, even as they were thought beautiful today.
And to
recognize this is not a bad thing at all. It is liberation. It’s all made of
the same components, and all of it comes and goes. That leaves only one thing
that makes any difference, even if it too shall pass: the life lived with
character while it can still be lived. That is the most practical guidance.
Written in 12/2008
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