If a man has done wrong, the harm is his own.
But perhaps he has not done wrong.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 9.38 (tr
Long)
The first
statement is classic Stoicism. The second statement is Stoicism in its sharpest
form. It is one thing to understand that the wrongs of another can do me no
harm, but it goes even further to admit that perhaps there was never a wrong to
begin with.
If I have felt
hurt, my first assumption is that someone has hurt me. No, I have only hurt
myself, while the actions of another have darkened his own character. Our thoughts
and deeds reflect back onto ourselves, for good or for ill.
Still, I will
be tempted to cast blame. This relieves me of responsibility, and allows me to
harbor a resentment to justify my indignation and outrage. I assume that if
evil was done to me, I am now permitted to do evil in return, and so we
continue in the cycle of hatred for hatred.
Yes, a terrible
injustice may have been committed, my possessions taken, or my reputation
ruined, or my body crippled. Still, my own judgment will determine how I allow
any of this to affect me. The evil begins in another man’s heart and mind, and he
wishes to cast it upon me as well. Yet if I simply hold up my hand and do not
allow it to enter my own heart and mind, the evil stays with him.
Allow me to
also consider the power of my own estimation at a deeper level than that. I am
the one in control of the damage done to my soul by an offense. Am I not also the
one in control of discerning if there even was an offense at all?
How often have
I hastily judged that someone has acted with malice, or is out to get me, or has
wished to do me some harm? And how often has that perception actually been
completely false, a result only of my own imagination, a foolish assumption
that says nothing about what is wrong with another, and everything about what
is wrong with me?
It is easy to
rush to a conclusion, and to let my doubts about my own motives lead to my questioning
the motives of others. I am still allowing my impressions to rule me instead of
ruling myself.
By all means,
let me bear any wrongdoing by another with dignity and charity. Let me also be
careful never to think there even was any wrongdoing where it did not exist. It is a noble thing to be the better man, and nobler still not to
presume that another is the worse man.
Written in 12/2008
IMAGE: "You bad man! You very very bad man!"
IMAGE: "You bad man! You very very bad man!"
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