“If
any man makes search for truth with all his penetration,
and
would be led astray by no deceiving paths,
let
him turn upon himself the light of an inward gaze,
let
him bend by force the long-drawn wanderings
of
his thoughts into one circle;
let
him tell surely to his soul,
that
he has, thrust away within the treasures of his mind,
all
that he labors to acquire without.
Then
shall that truth,
which
now was hid in error's darkening cloud,
shine
forth more clear than Phoebus' self.
For
the body, though it brings material mass which breeds forgetfulness,
has
never driven forth all light from the mind.
The
seed of truth does surely cling within,
and
can be roused as a spark by the fanning of philosophy.
For
if it is not so, how do you men make answers
true
of your own instinct when teachers question you?
Is
it not that the quick spark of truth
lies
buried in the heart's low depths?
And
if the Muse of Plato sends through those depths the voice of truth,
each
man has not forgotten
and
is but reminding himself of what he learns.”
—from Book
3, Poem 11
I was
always a bit confused, from the earliest age, when people told me that the
value of my life was about “finding myself”, yet at the very same time they
told me that my identity was measured by a long list of external conditions
that had to be met. I couldn’t quite make the two work together. Which was it,
or, at the very least, which came first?
I was
usually met with an empty gaze when I asked these sorts of questions. I suspect
many kind people, intending only the best, wanted me to find myself through making something better of my
circumstances. But which one was the end, and which one was the means? Is this
a chicken-or-the-egg sort of problem?
I had
the benefit of attending a fancy liberal arts high school, one that taught me
to love learning for its own sake, to think for myself, to become a fellow who
didn’t just play the game. Then junior year rolled around, and the only
question that now seemed important hung over my head: what will be my college
of choice?
That had
already been decided for me, by the simple fact that my father had put his
sweat and blood into a teaching job that covered my tuition. My parents hadn’t
sent me to this high school to win entry to an Ivy League, but to build my
character. We simply didn’t have the $100,000 or so required for me to attend
one of the “best” colleges; to be quite honest, I was never sure they were the
“best” to begin with. Image can be so powerful.
Still,
our college advisor became quite furious with me. “Don’t be so stupid, you need
to aim for something better!” he yelled at me one day, in front of a group of other
students, making me a local laughing stock for a time. So I became “the dumb
Irish bastard that doesn’t care about his education.”
I bear
that man no ill will, but it was all an epiphany for me. What mattered to him
was the social status associated with this or that school, and what mattered to
me and my family was helping me to distinguish the true from the false, the
right from the wrong.
Is it
possible to have both? It could well be, but I will hardly become wiser and
better on the inside by accumulating any trappings on the outside. If I need to
pick one over the other, I know exactly what is necessary. I would still make
the same decision, without any hesitation.
I have
made many mistakes in my life, and followed many false paths, yet I did learn
that any merit I might have would never come from all of those sparkling accessories.
The diploma doesn’t make me better. The job doesn’t make me better. The bank
account doesn’t make me better. The social circle doesn’t make me better.
My own
wisdom and virtue, arising from within me, are all that can make me better. Now
I might not have as much of that as I should, though what little I do have of
worth came from my own thinking and doing, not from anyone else’s.
There’s
the rub. What is decent about me is all about what is decent in my own soul. I
can manage to do that, if only I so choose, whether I am “attending” at a fancy
school, and then working at a powerful firm, or reading a good book on the
subway, and then picking up other people’s trash.
I don’t
need credentials to be a good man. I need only consider myself, who and what I
am, to be a good man. Look within, and be willing to leave the rest. I have all
I require right here, and must only remember what all those diversions have
tried to make me forget.
Written in 9/2015
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