Does
the light of the lamp shine without losing its splendor until it is
extinguished?
And
shall the truth that is in you, and justice, and temperance, be extinguished
before your death?
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 12.15 (tr
Long)
A flame
will shine as long as it burns, as is in its nature. Will I also shine as long
as I live, as is in my nature? Unlike the flame, I possess judgment, and
whether I express the humanity that is within me will be decided by my own
choices.
First,
of course, I must understand what my nature tells me I should do. That the
flame will produce light and heat seems obvious enough, but what am I made to
produce?
Some
tell me it is to receive pleasure, or to acquire possessions, or to make a name
for myself. That, they say, is success, and that, they say, is what it means to
burn bright. Yet none of that has much of anything to do with my nature, but
with the nature of other things. What is my own excellence?
As a
creature with a mind, it is the power to understand, and as a creature with a
will, it is the power to love. There is my light, and anything else is not the
source of my light, but what I may cast my light upon.
Let me
be informed by wisdom. Let me be filled with courage. Let me master myself with
temperance. Let me do all things with justice. If I strive for these, I can be
indifferent to anything else.
The only
thing that will extinguish my light is when I permit myself to be smothered by
impressions and diversions. I have seen it many times, the fellow who speaks so
nobly about how virtue burns within him, but he is only producing smoke. At the
lowest points in my life, I have been that very person. I do not wish to be him
again.
One day,
the oil in the lamp will be exhausted, and the flame will go out. One day, the
strength in my body will be exhausted, and my life will go out. That is at it
should be, but it would be the greatest tragedy if my struggle for character,
for my very humanity, were to be exhausted well before my body.
Then I
would just be a shell of a man, still walking, and talking, and going to critical
meetings, and taking fancy business trips, and telling clever jokes at dinner
parties, even as I am no longer living the life of a man.
I am
burned out when I have surrendered my will to do right, not when I cease to be
considered an efficient producer and consumer.
Let all
the important people say whatever they want, but do be concerned if the decent
folks start noticing that your lights are out, and nobody’s at home.
Written in 8/2009
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