To him who is penetrated by true
principles even the briefest precept is sufficient, and any common precept, to
remind him that he should be free from grief and fear. For example:
"Leaves, some the wind
scatters on the ground—
So is the race of men."
Leaves, also, are your children;
and leaves, too, are they who cry out as if they were worthy of credit and
bestow their praise, or on the contrary curse, or secretly blame and sneer; and
leaves, in like manner, are those who shall receive and transmit a man's fame
to after-times.
For all such things as these
"are produced in the season of spring," as the poet says; then the
wind casts them down; then the forest produces other leaves in their places.
But a brief existence is common
to all things, and yet you avoid and pursue all things as if they would be
eternal. A little time, and you shall close your eyes; and him who has attended
you to your grave another soon will lament.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 10.34 (tr
Long)
I have often made use of many
different clever expressions, or lines of poetry, or words from a song to help
me along my way. For many years, I would recite bits of Rudyard Kipling’s “If—“
to myself whenever I felt discouraged by this whole life seeming wasted:
If
you can meet with Triumph and Disaster,
And
treat those two impostors just the same . . .
I once worked with a woman, very kind
and unassuming, who had a quirky and inspiring personal habit. It took me many
months to really figure out what she was even doing, because she did it so
quietly. Whenever she felt anxious or frustrated, she would softly whistle the
tune to “Dust in the Wind” by Kansas:
Now,
don't hang on,
Nothing
lasts forever but the earth and sky.
It
slips away,
And
all your money won't another minute buy.
My own family, as I often recount,
would of course regularly say things like “they already have their reward,” or
“this too shall pass,” or “the pendulum swings”, or “if you don’t like the
weather, wait a minute.”
There’s a perfectly good reason
there are so many sayings to help us remember that life is fragile and
fleeting, precisely because we need to be reminded of this fact again and
again, whenever we make the forces in the world too big, or whenever we make
ourselves too big. We need to regain a proper perspective, whenever we confuse
something that comes and goes in an instant with something that lasts forever.
The words can be as noble as those
of Homer, or they can be as mundane as those of Bill Murray in Meatballs: “It just doesn’t matter!” They
can be a ready aid in not being intimidated by the posturing of self-important
people, and a ready cure for not becoming that way within ourselves.
One of things I miss the most from
my old home up in Boston is the weather. Yes, that gets a good laugh every
time, because who would want all of that craziness? I actually appreciated at
least some of that craziness, in that well-defined seasons can provide a
reassurance that however much I like or dislike something, it will be different
tomorrow. New will replace old, and the new will in turn likewise become old.
It all comes around again.
The leaves changing color, and then
falling, and then being swept about by the wind were especially beautiful. If I
didn’t know any better, I’d think it was terrible natural disaster, where
everything ended up freezing and dying.
And yet it started all over again.
If I can only attend to this rightly, the changes of the seasons themselves can
speak to me like some comforting lines of poetry.
Written in 3/2009
No comments:
Post a Comment