Epictetus
also said, a man must discover an art with respect to giving his assent.
And
in respect to his movements he must be careful that they be made with regard to
circumstances, that they be consistent with social interests, that they have
regard to the value of the object.
And
as to sensual desire, he should altogether keep away from it.
And
as to avoidance, he should not show it with respect to any of the things that
are not in our power.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 11.37 (tr
Long)
I would
often sit and wonder about the secrets of life, about how I could somehow tap
into all those profound truths that only the most enlightened of sages could
hope to access. The wisdom of it surely must be hidden, I thought, or otherwise
so many of us out here in the world wouldn’t be so terribly miserable. It had
to be arcane and esoteric, since common sense clearly wasn’t doing it for the
rest of us.
Take a
ride home on the subway during rush hour, and you will immediately see the
plight of man. If he could, he would certainly do better than this. If it were
within his power, he would find a way out of this.
But it
is well within my power, and it demands no initiation into mysteries. I have
not failed to acquire any cryptic principles of life; I have only overlooked that
most basic of rules, that I should look before I leap.
The art
of living well is not just reserved for the special folks. Let reason guide
over passion, and let understanding give purpose to desire.
Good
habits of life come from practice, and good practice comes from action, and
good action comes from reflection. It doesn’t require thinking about it for a
long time, but rather thinking about it well. Thinking more will rarely help me,
while thinking more thoroughly always does. A moment is enough.
When
should I say “yes” to anything? When I grasp the actual conditions I am facing,
instead of just spouting elaborate principles and platitudes. Grandstanding
will not do. Let my values serve the actual situation. Does it make me a better
man, or only a richer, more gratified, or more popular man?
By what
measure should I decide what to do? When I show love to others, to all others,
and without any exception to that requirement. Must someone else be abandoned,
rejected, or cast aside? Then I am choosing poorly. It amazes me how many
people say they have done right, while at same time doing wrong to others.
How
should I face my passions? Let me by all means enjoy life, but let me not be
ruled by my enjoyment. Am I doing it only because it is fun? There is that very
leaping, all without the looking. There is action, divorced from thought. There
is desire, separated from responsibility.
Are
there things I should avoid? Yes, but not the things I usually think of as
harmful to me. If they have nothing to do with what I can make better from my own character, I am called to let them be. I will not run away from your
mockery, or your abuse, or your hatred. Do what you must; I will do what I must
do to improve myself.
None of
these values are special, or secret, or obscure. They come from looking at a
human being the right way up, with mind giving order to the body, the higher
directing the lower.
Being
crammed into the subway train isn’t even the problem. Making something of
myself, by building the habit of conscience, is the solution.
Written in 7/2009
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