The
unripe grape, the ripe bunch, the dried grape, are all changes, not into
nothing, but into something which exists not yet.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 11.35 (tr
Long)
I will
often find change frightening, because I perceive it as the ending of something,
to then be left with nothing. This can be a powerful illusion, built upon an
attachment to particular circumstances. Dependent on this state of affairs for
my security, I am in dread of any other state of affairs.
The
fact, of course, is that change is not a cessation, but a transformation.
Things do not simply stop, they rather become something else. This arrangement
has passed, and there is now a new arrangement.
The
anxiety grows from a sense that there will now be a huge absence in life, and
what I am failing to see is that there is always a presence, that any condition
at all offers me the opportunity to live well. It may not be what I expect, or
what is most convenient, and it hardly should be. It is about moving forward,
not standing still.
There
are these moments scattered about in my life that may have felt perfect; they
often seemed quite rare, or they passed so quickly. So I get nostalgic and
melancholic, wondering how I can bring them back. I can’t bring them back, nor
should I want to bring them back. Let me keep them in my memory, though not to
dwell upon them, but to teach me how to do things right for this moment.
And at
this moment, as things move along around me, there will be times when I feel
lonely, when I can’t foresee any hope, when it appears to be the end of the
road. What possible options could remain, I ask myself? Perhaps just one, but
it is more than enough, charged with everything necessary to live in peace: let
me do right, whatever I face, and that is a life completely well lived.
It
doesn’t matter what stage of life I am in, or what strange new situation may
arise. Whatever it may be, I can be certain that it offers everything I need,
as there is never a time when a man cannot be kind, and decent, and loving, and
just. Success, in the deepest human sense, is always possible, as long as I
decide upon it.
This is
hardly possible if I define myself by my circumstances, but a Stoic mindset
makes it quite possible, where I define myself by my own judgments and actions.
“Stop looking out there, that’s not where you’re going to find it!”
The
grape grows on the vine, it ripens, it is harvested, it is dried. Perhaps I may
now make it a part of my meal, and that meal gives me some strength of body to
live another day. In that day I can now act, and as I act I continue to pass
myself into yet other things, even if I die, and the chain is never really
broken at all.
Written in 7/2009
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