Consider
that everything is opinion, and opinion is in your power. Take away, then, when
you choose your opinion, and like a mariner who has doubled the promontory, you
will find calm, everything stable, and a waveless bay.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 12.22 (tr
Long)
Relativists
love this passage, and many others like it, because they think it means that
Stoicism denies that there is any objective truth. They are free to think so,
of course, that all propositions are both equally true and false, but I would
suggest that this is not what Marcus Aurelius intends.
It isn’t
that there is no truth or falsehood, or any right or wrong, or that we can
never know anything with certainty. It is rather that how we think about
things, our opinions, estimations, or judgments, will directly shape how we
live, and that by changing our thinking we can determine whether we find
happiness or misery.
It is my
own thinking that will bring me closer to Nature, or make me drift further away
from it. All is opinion, because that is the only thing that will make or break
me. It isn’t my circumstances that make me troubled or content, angry or
accepting, hateful or loving. Conflict or peace are not states given to me, but
something I make of what is given.
Having
spent most of my adult life accompanied by the Black Dog has often felt like a
curse, something no one, not even my worst enemy, should ever have to endure.
Yet I have also, in a rather odd sort of way, learned to turn it into a
blessing. I have sat down and talked it through endlessly with fancy
professionals, I have been on all sorts of pills whose names I can’t pronounce,
and I have tried to exorcise my demons with prayer.
Yet the
Black Dog never went away, and over the years he actually seemed to become
bigger and stronger. No matter, let me make good use of him, as much as he
claws, and bites, and blocks my light. He is as important to me as I make him
out to be.
Does it
hurt? Good, let me learn some compassion from it. Does he fill me with doubt?
Good, let me struggle all the harder to find certainty. Does he tell me I
should surrender, that my life is not worth living? Good, let me live all the
more. Let me smile through my tears, and let me wash myself clean with them.
The only
thing that ever kept the Black Dog on his leash was the way I thought about
him, and how I decided to understand what was happening to me. He never went
away, but he doesn’t have to. I have used him to become better. What little
kindness and decency I have in me actually came from having him around.
I won’t
find that calm and peaceful bay somewhere out there, but only within myself. I
will do this by using my reason, that little Divine spark within me, that can
find meaning and purpose in anything and everything. I
can keep what benefits me, and leave what harms me.
Written in 9/2009
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