The things are three of which you
are composed: a little body, a little breath of life, and the intelligence.
Of these the first two are yours,
so far as it is your duty to take care of them, but the third alone is properly
yours.
Therefore if you shall separate
from yourself, that is, from your understanding, whatever others do or say, and
whatever you have done or said yourself, and whatever future things trouble you
because they may happen;
and whatever in the body that
envelops you, or in the breath of life, which is by nature associated with the
body, is attached to you independent of your will;
and whatever the external
circumfluent vortex whirls round, so that the intellectual power exempt from
the things of fate can live pure and free by itself, doing what is just and
accepting what happens and saying the truth;
and if you will separate, I say,
from this ruling faculty the things that are attached to it by the impressions
of sense, and the things of time to come and of time that is past, and will
make yourself like Empedocles' sphere,
"All round and in its joyous
rest reposing;”
and if you shall strive to live
only what is really your life, that is, the present—then you will be able to
pass that portion of life that remains for you up to the time of your death,
free from perturbations, nobly, and obedient to your own daemon, to the god
that is within you.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 12.3 (tr
Long)
I can be
quite foolish. Yes, I will gladly laugh along with your jokes. I arrogantly tried
to go straight to the Greek here, thinking I could somehow “improve” Long’s version,
in order to avoid that terrible run-on sentence. Even a desperate appeal to other
translations didn’t help me. I will save it all for someone far more gifted.
Still,
the meaning becomes quite clear, requiring only a bit of squinting and
squirming.
I may say
that three things are mine: my body, my life, and my thoughts. That is already
quite an improvement upon the usual illusion, that my property is mine, or that
my reputation is mine, or that my credentials are mine. They have nothing to do
with me, of course, and even my body and my life are only lent to me; I am given
care over them, and I do not actually possess them.
No, only
my mind and will are my own for now. That sounds quite wonderful in theory, but
how can I possibly live my life in practice, without all the other bits and
pieces people insist must define me?
Well, I
don’t have to live how they tell me I must; I can live as I know that I must. I
should strip away everything that is extraneous, and reveal who I truly am,
beneath all the bluster and the noise. If I don’t really care for the trappings,
they won’t trouble me.
I know
full well how the priests, the politicians, and the businessmen lie to me. I
have been their fool all along, and I knew it all along. I played along, only
in the hope of becoming one of them. Then there is that moment, when it’s time
to clean all the accumulated crud off of my glasses.
Love
others, but do not care what they say about you. That isn’t you.
Learn
from your mistakes, but do not let others shame you about them. You can now be
a new man.
If they
tell you to worry about your future, know that they are playing you. Your merit
is immediately in your present.
Are you
weak, or sick, or dying? Are they trying to corner you by selling you magic
cures? These are not the cures you need.
The
situation seems hopeless, but your merit isn’t about your situation. Your merit
is about your choices, in whatever circumstances you may find yourself.
Wait,
they want you to lie, to cheat, and to steal for them? You are better than
that, and you are more than that.
You feel
hungry, despondent, lonely, and abandoned? There is your chance, what a
wonderful chance, to be everything they tell you that you cannot be, to be
everything they choose not to be. Be human, even as they deny their own
humanity.
You are
finally about to go. Yes, it comes to us all. So die with dignity, and without
any shame. Stand up.
We
assume that the winners die with the most toys, yet the best people die with a
good conscience. The difference is like that between night and day.
Perhaps
the scoundrels have found a way to sleep well at night; I know only that I must
find a way to live well right now, removing all the external obstacles to my
inner peace. Cast aside anything and everything that gets in the way of first
and foremost being a good man. Dispose of the residue.
Replace
the impression of glory with the substance of decency. It will be a joyous
rest, indeed.
Written in 7/2009
We must free our minds of the influence of others and the way society tells us we should act or behave. Once we are able to single out our minds to act properly, we will be truly free from the external influences of the world. We find no dignity in reputation, fortune, or power yet in the way we carry ourselves each day and how we continually will pursue the cultivation of our character.
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