As
those who try to stand in your way when you are proceeding according to right
reason will not be able to turn you aside from your proper action, so neither
let them drive you from your benevolent feelings toward them, but be on your
guard equally in both matters, not only in the matter of steady judgment and
action, but also in the matter of gentleness to those who try to hinder or
otherwise trouble you.
For
this also is a weakness, to be vexed at them, as well as to be diverted from your
course of action and to give way through fear; for both are equally deserters
from their post—the man who does it through fear, and the man who is alienated
from him who is by nature a kinsman and a friend.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 11.9 (tr
Long)
Old habits will die hard. Even when
I have thought something through as thoroughly as I can, doing my best to
remove all selfishness or pride from my judgment, I will still feel discouraged
when others put me down for my conviction, and I will be sorely tempted to the
deepest despair or fiercest anger.
But if I follow through with that
response, how will my response be any different from theirs?
People aren’t just bad in the
biggest and most obvious ways, but are far more often nasty and brutish in the
smallest and subtlest of ways. What stings me the most, for example, is being
dismissed and ignored, not being slandered and assaulted. Show me an enemy I
can fight fairly, I think to myself, not one who slices off little bits of me
when I’m not really looking.
But there is no need for any of
that. That way lies only my own doom. If I am committed to doing right and
living well, then let me also clearly show love. Yes, even to those who snipe
away, who gossip behind my back, who treat me like human garbage. Scratch that:
especially to those people.
There will nothing of worth within
myself if I cannot treat others with worth. If I don’t like how deeply the
insult wounds me, I should cease to be insulting. If I don’t like being cast
aside, I should cease to cast aside. I should not be ashamed, as I have been so
often, to proudly proclaim that old hippie mantra: love is the law.
I may well feel the hurt, but that
hurt does not need to become resentment. The former happens to me, and is a
product of my passions, but the latter is something I choose, the product of my
reason. There is no blame in pain, even as there is quite a bit of blame in frustration
about pain.
Try asking people you know for help,
even with the simplest of things, and notice how many of those who have the
least will still give all of themselves, and many of those who have the most
will give you absolutely nothing at all. This is because some people are quite
enamored of the having, not of the offering.
This may make my blood boil, but I
must be wary of that trigger. Tell me that you will not help me, and I must
still, despite all of my doubts, do my best to help you.
I originally thought Winston
Churchill said it, but apparently it was Victor Hugo. Either one would be a
worthy source:
You
have enemies? Why, it is the story of every man who has done a great deed or
created a new idea. It is the cloud which thunders around everything that
shines. Fame must have enemies, as light must have gnats. Do no bother yourself
about it; disdain. Keep your mind serene as you keep your life clear.
Written in 4/2009
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