When
a man has presented the appearance of having done wrong, say this:
How
then do I know if this is a wrongful act? And even if he has done wrong, how do
I know that he has not condemned himself? And so this is like him tearing at his
own face.
Consider
that he who would not have the bad man do wrong, is like the man who would not
have the fig tree to bear juice in the figs, and infants to cry, and the horse
to neigh, and whatever else must of necessity be.
For
what must a man do who has such a character? If then you are irritable, cure
this man's disposition.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 12.16 (tr
Long)
“I don’t
understand why he did such a terrible thing!” For the very same reason I have
done terrible things.
“I hope
he rots in Hell, he deserves to suffer!” Perhaps he is already suffering more
than I know.
“If only
he hadn’t done that, my life would be so much better!” Yes, my circumstances
may well be different, but that isn’t what will make my life better or worse.
How
often have I insisted another has done the wrong thing, and yet it turned out
he actually did what was right? Easily as often as I have insisted I have done
the right thing, and yet it turned out I had done what was wrong.
How
often have I thoughtlessly and heartlessly wanted to punish someone else?
Surely as often as I have forgotten that my own vices were my own worst
punishment.
How
often have I despaired over all the greed, and lust, and treachery in this
world? Probably as often as I have ignored what it must mean to be truly human.
I will regularly
expect the world to act according to my preferences, revealing my deepest
vanity, and for people to always do right by me, revealing my deepest
ignorance. I do not understand human nature, or its place within Providence, if
I do not see that people will act according to their own judgment, for better
or for worse.
Sometimes
they will choose well, and sometimes they will choose poorly. It could be no
other way in a Universe where rational creatures are trying to discover
themselves, to find their own paths. Demanding that a man should never be able
to choose what is bad for him is like demanding that a fire should never be
hot.
If I am
despondent or angry about wrongdoing, it is fruitless to ask that it go away;
it is here for a perfectly good reason, a part of Nature unfolding as it
should. It is better if I turn my thinking around, and ask what good I am
called to do in reply.
If I am
confronted with someone who has actually done wrong, nothing of benefit will
come, for either of us, by dismissing or hating him; he has done what he thinks
is best, however confused he may be. It is better if I turn my thinking around,
and ask how I can help him to understand and to love.
I see
more clearly, day by day, that a Stoic Turn requires more than just forming a
conscience, or even treating virtue as the highest human good. It further asks
for the deepest transformation, where old assumptions about what was true and
false, good and evil, are shaken to the core.
I am
given reason precisely so I do not need to be ruled by what happens to me, and
I am being quite unreasonable when I deny that very gift to others. It is only
by improving myself that I can ever help another to improve himself.
Written in 8/2009
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