I
have often wondered how it is that every man loves himself more than all the
rest of men, but yet sets less value on his own opinion of himself than on the
opinion of others.
If
then a god or a wise teacher should present himself to a man and bid him to
think of nothing and to design nothing that he would not express as soon as he
conceived it, he could not endure it even for a single day. So much more respect have we to what our
neighbors shall think of us than to what we shall think of ourselves.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 12.4 (tr
Long)
I have
spent most of my life ignored by others, and I have responded with either wild
resentment or peaceful acceptance. Every so often, I have found myself
ridiculed or cast aside by others, and I have responded with either wild
resentment or peaceful acceptance. Whether I was happy or not depended quite a
bit on the choices I made about what came to me.
Now one
might think that this would, at the very best, teach me a bit of healthy
self-reliance, or, at the very worst, drag me down into some rather unhealthy
isolation. Oddly enough, I usually still felt the need to crave approval. I
wanted so desperately to be recognized, and if there were some occasions when I
was recognized, I wanted so desperately to be recognized well.
I
believe that instinct to be perfectly natural, to desire being a part of
something, to have a place within the whole, and to have that place be
confirmed by those around me. My mistake was always in thinking that the approval
made me good, instead of seeing that what was good could then be worthy of
approval. The instinct was not tempered by reason.
As in so
many things Stoic, my priorities were flipped; the cause was confused with the
consequence. No man is ever made to be alone, but sometimes he will find
himself in solitude. Indeed, he is never alone if he lives well, looking to his
conscience first and foremost; then he is working with and for all
things, for all his neighbors, for every part of creation, even if he is not
given any trophies, or awards, or further bonuses.
Should I
care what other people think? Yes, of course, because they are my brothers and
sisters. Should I make who I am dependent on what they think? No, absolutely
not, because then I am hardly myself.
The
Stoic Turn requires working from the inside out, not from the outside in. The
mentality of the herd demands working from outside in, not from the inside out.
Once I
look to anything beyond my own wisdom and virtue as the measure of my life, I
have also surrendered the mastery of my life. Many folks will tell you that
they are powerful, precisely because they are loved by others. No, they are
actually weak, precisely because they have not first loved others.
What
have I received? That’s a crapshoot. What have I given? There’s the golden
ticket.
Written in 7/2009
Selflessness is not listening to every criticism or comment someone else has for us or what we do. It's to serve the good unto others and the whole and not to just selfishly prioritize one's own needs. But we need not surrender ourselves to bend to the will of others. We should hear what others have to say, but choose what we listen to.
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