If
it is not right, do not do it; if it is not true, do not say it.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 12.17 (tr
Long)
I have
been around the block enough times now to have seen all sorts of glimmering
appearances and elaborate displays. Corporations will say that they care about
you, and politicians will say that they are fighting for justice and decency,
and scholars will say that they only want the truth.
A few
may really mean it, but most of them are playing you. The corporations want
your money, the politicians want your vote, and the scholars want to look
important.
I don’t
even need to look at the big picture, since the people right around me will do
just as well. How often have I heard noble assurances of friendship, of
honesty, of commitment, only to watch it all fall down when the breeze changes
direction?
We are
drawn to mouthing the fine phrases, but when the rubber meets the road, we make
excuses and look the other way. This is because words without actions feel easy,
theory without practice is cheap, and appearances seem more convenient than
realities.
A sure
sign you are being played is when all sorts of conditions and exceptions are
added to a promise, like those contracts you sign where the fine print actually
tells you that the guarantee is not really a guarantee.
The ends
suddenly justify the means, because we apparently “have to” hurt some people to
benefit others, or a deception is really just a harmless “white lie”, or it is
necessary to “bend the rules” to get something done.
And the
contradiction behind it all is the claim that we can ever achieve something
good by doing something bad, or that to speak the truth we must tell
falsehoods. Left is right, and up is down, and things can become better my making
things worse. War is peace. Freedom is
slavery. Ignorance is strength.
I could
get quite cynical about life when I see the posturing and the hypocrisy, or I
could learn something helpful from it. Now I know who I can trust, and now I
know how not to do it. People who do everything sideways are hardly good
company, and I am hardly a good man if I don’t move beyond my own hemming and
hawing.
If I am
a creature of reason, I am made for virtue, and there is no getting around
that. Being virtuous will only be hard for me if I fail to genuinely and
sincerely change my priorities.
If I am
a creature of reason, my speech should reflect what is true and good, and there
is no getting around that. Honesty will only be hard for me if I have some other
intention in my heart.
As those
wise bards of the 1980’s, The Fixx, told us: Do what you say, say what you mean.
Written in 9/2009
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