Now, since, in general, toil and
hardship are a necessity for all men, both for those who seek the better ends
and for those who seek the worse, it is preposterous that those who are
pursuing the better are not much more eager in their efforts than those for
whom there is small hope of reward for all their pains.
Yet when we see acrobats face
without concern their difficult tasks and risk their very lives in performing
them, turning somersaults over up-turned swords or walking ropes set at a great
height or flying through the air like birds, where one misstep means death, all
of which they do for a miserably small recompense, shall we not be ready to
endure hardship for the sake of complete happiness? For surely there is no
other end in becoming good than to become happy and to live happily for the
remainder of our lives.
It may
indeed seem odd that I will work harder, and be willing to suffer more, for the
wrong things instead of the right things, or for what is less important over
what is more important. All those years struggling for the perfect career, the
finest home, or the best reputation, and barely a moment spent on becoming
kinder, more sincere, or strong enough to love those who may treat me with
contempt.
But
perhaps it shouldn’t surprise me at all, because the degree of my efforts, and
of what I can bear, will be in direct proportion to how much something means to
me. How much it means to me will, in turn, follow from my own judgment. As a
creature made with reason and choice, it is necessary that I am free to choose
error instead of truth, ignorance instead of knowledge.
One
thing may seem better than another only because I have decided that it is more
immediate or gratifying, when all I have really done is to trade the ultimate
for the proximate, or the end for the means. Yes, I will cross over mighty
rivers, and climb up the highest mountains, even for the worst possible goals,
having foolishly considered them to be the best.
The fact
that ignorance is fairly easy and that knowledge already requires its own
effort, combined with the force of bad habits and the pressures of conformity,
will make it all the easier for me to get myself all mixed up inside.
And so,
as with all things Stoic, I must attend to the quality of my own understanding
first, and recognize that the circumstances will only be of any worth through
the quality of my understanding. I will begin to live well, and be willing to
sacrifice anything for it, when I begin to think well.
I should
notice how so many of my twisted judgments are joined to the assumption that
adding this pleasure, or that possession, or increasing my standing with such
and such people, will make me happy. There is already an example of lazy
thinking, because it replaces what I do with what is done to me.
The best
circus acrobat may receive very little for pursuing his art, yet look at the hard
practice that must go into his training, and the dangers he is willing to face.
If he will do so much for his profession, I can surely put up with a bit more
for my happiness.
Written in 8/1999
No comments:
Post a Comment