Let
it not be in any man's power to say truly of you that you are not simple or
that you are not good, but let him be a liar whoever shall think anything of
this kind about you; and this is altogether in your power.
For
who is he that shall hinder you from being good and simple? Do you only
determine to live no longer unless you shall be such. For neither does reason
allow you to live, if you are not such.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 10.32 (tr
Long)
We find it so easy to condemn
others, even as we find it so hard to be condemned by others. We feel powerful
when we dismiss, and we feel weak when we are dismissed. Malice is gratifying
when given, though quite agonizing when received.
It is helpful to remember that we
should hardly wish to treat others as we would not wish to be treated, and on
another level it is also helpful to remember that the pain we inflict when we
denounce, and the pain we suffer when we are denounced, are both symptoms of a
flawed sense of human merit.
I do not make another better or
worse at all by what I think and say of him, and another does make me better or
worse at all by what he thinks and says of me. Both of us are better or worse
by the virtue and vice within us, not from any estimation outside of us.
I only mistakenly think that my
judgments can hurt my neighbor, or that my neighbor’s judgments can hurt me, if
I reduce the dignity and worth of people to mere appearances. We are really
quite weak within ourselves when we feel the need to put others down in order
to raise ourselves up. We are far better served by improving our own character,
regardless of what others may think or say.
I have often let myself be laid low
by the poor opinion of others, and this has been even harder when it has come
from people I thought I could trust, or when an attack is aimed straight at my
own sense of right and wrong. Still, I am the one who decides how well or how
poorly I will choose to live. My own thinking is in charge here, not the
thinking of another.
Let me listen to others, let me
learn from others, and let me be open to the perspectives of others, but let me
remain my own master. We should believe things because they are true, not
assume that they are true just because they are believed. If I choose to follow
a life that is simple and good, and if I do so with a sincere and informed
conscience, then my actions will speak for themselves. How others may speak
does not determine me, since who I am proceeds from me.
In my worse times, I have thought
that my life is no longer worth living when others have cast me aside. In my better
times, I have come to understand that only I can cast myself aside. My life is
worth living as long as I can practice being decent and just, and I have only
wasted my life when I have abandoned that measure of my humanity.
Written in 3/2009
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