Chapter
3
You
ask me what I think we had better make use of to help us to support this ennui.
"The
best thing," as Athenodorus says, "is to occupy oneself with
business, with the management of affairs of state and the duties of a citizen:
for as some pass the day in exercising themselves in the sun and in taking care
of their bodily health, and athletes find it most useful to spend the greater
part of their time in feeding up the muscles and strength to whose cultivation
they have devoted their lives; so too for you who are training your mind to
take part in the struggles of political life, it is far more honorable to be
thus at work than to be idle.”
Begin by committing to action. What
is it that I know I must do to be a good man? Let me actually start by living
well, instead of merely thinking about it. Pondering will not be enough.
There is that powerful line from
Marcus Aurelius:
Waste no more time arguing what a good man should
be. Be one.
As Aristotle said, we become good by
doing what is good, and our excellence increases through habit. Just like the
athlete who exercises his body to grow in strength, speed, agility, and
stamina, so too the man of virtue will practice good works to grow in prudence,
fortitude, temperance, and justice.
The text Seneca cites in this
chapter, which I assume comes from the now lost writings of Athenodorus
Cananites, refers specifically to the political life. This is quite suitable
for Serenus, a patrician, who was already born to be in public service.
Remember how at one moment he is quite
eager to engage in his career, and yet then at another he only wishes to retire,
to run away from it all? What Serenus needs so desperately is to find that balance, the way to be a part of the outside world, while still retaining his inner
peace of mind.
Seneca and Athenodorus may be
speaking to a certain type of person, but the principles apply to all types of
people, whatever their callings may be.
Have you ever wished you were born
to wealth, to power, to prestige, like Athenodorus, or Serenus, or Seneca? Of
course you have, because these are the things that the brutal and the base
value the most, and you can’t help but notice how loudly and insistently the
entitled tell you about their superiority.
Yet notice how such conditions did
not make them any better or happier. What some consider benefits, others may
see as curses. Seneca is trying to help Serenus come to terms with his
character, regardless of his position.
Having anything fine never made
anyone happier, though being someone fine has made some blessed.
So don’t worry if you didn’t go to
Harvard or Yale, or you don’t have a financial portfolio, or you aren’t invited
to cocktail parties in Lower Manhattan. I, for one, was never even invited to
the keggers in college. Stoic wisdom is still for you, as it is for all of us.
Replace any references here about being in high office with whatever it is you
might do, wherever you may find yourself. You will discover the principles to
be just as sound and just as helpful.
Thank God, there can be no snobbery
in genuine Stoicism.
Written in 6/2011
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