.
. . Second, consider what kind of men they are at table, in bed, and so forth;
and particularly, under what compulsions in respect of opinions they are; and
as to their acts, consider with what pride they do what they do. . .
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 11.18 (tr
Long)
What a relief it can be to practice
thinking with someone instead of
merely thinking at or against someone. It is the difference between attempting to
understand why he acts the way he does, rather than just feeling contempt for
how he acts.
I can observe how he chooses to live
from day to day, in the most common of ways, and I can then begin to see what
truly motivates him. What perceived needs seem to drive him? What judgments
inform him? What does he think is worthy of respect?
This will not excuse another, or
remove any wrongdoing on his part, or require that I agree with him. It will
simply allow me to consider my neighbor with compassion over condemnation. When
I see what he cares for, I will not feel so angry or threatened, knowing that
we are all subject to error, even as we are still certain that what we desire
is good.
When I can make some sense of why he
is hateful, or deceitful, or grasping, he will appear in a very different
light. Would I be resentful of a man who does himself harm, or would it be
better to show him pity? What good will come from fighting him, when I can
perhaps offer him help? This will become possible if I can try to look at the
world as he looks at it.
I can certainly not look down at him
for taking pride in abusing others, if I only abuse him in return. To think
with him allows me to think more clearly about myself.
I must not even consider all the
great existential struggles of this life, as the most mundane problems will
serve as ideal examples. So my lawyer is trying to charge me twice for the same
work. So my mechanic doesn’t do the job on the car he says he will do. So my
neighbor steals a case of beer off of my back porch. The first man is driven by
greed, the second is driven by laziness, and the third is driven by pleasure.
Their actions don’t just proceed
from nowhere, but follow from a certain estimation, however misguided or
selfish, about what they consider to be best for them. Let me, by all means,
correct them, but let me correct them as I would wish to be corrected, not with
vengeance but with justice, not with hatred but with love.
When I can somehow get into someone
else’s head, our shared humanity becomes far more apparent, and I will be all
the more hesitant to treat him as a what
instead of a who, as a punching bag
instead of a person.
Written in 5/2009
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