You
must decide whether your disposition is better suited for vigorous action or
for tranquil speculation and contemplation, and you must adopt whichever the bent
of your genius inclines you for.
Isocrates
laid hands upon Ephorus and led him away from the forum, thinking that he would
be more usefully employed in compiling chronicles; for no good is done by
forcing one's mind to engage in uncongenial work: it is vain to struggle
against Nature.
The rhetorician Isocrates, sometimes
called the “Good Sophist”, convinced Ephorus that he would make a better writer
than a speaker, not because the pay and the benefits would be better, but
because it was what best suited his particular gifts and strengths.
Some might do their best in the
public square, while others might do their best in their private rooms, and all
can play their specific parts, different in calling but equal in significance.
Remember that Serenus has been
worried that he will have to withdraw from the political life, left only to
waste away in his own studies. Seneca has reminded him that we must always be
in service to others, though we may find ourselves fulfilling that mission in
varying ways.
No action that serves Nature,
however obscure it may seem, is ever meaningless.
My own journey has been marked by
the expectation that I could be somebody by going out into the world, and was then
tempered by the realization that I was never cut for that sort of work.
At first I wanted to be a popular
musician, but I didn’t have the knack. Then I wanted to be a best-selling
writer, but my words were never the ones anyone wanted to read. Then I ended up
being a teacher, but the way I taught rocked the boat far too much. These were
all dead ends for me.
There finally came a point where I
put a few things together. The folks with the most impressive appearances
always told me to worry most about my appearances, but were those the only
folks to listen to? Those who were silent, unnoticed, and behind the scenes had
just as much to say.
As always, it came down to
considering what was really best in life: was it in the seeming or in the
doing? Did it matter if the doing didn’t result in any seeming?
The Stoic Turn, as I like to call
it, requires a reshuffling of priorities. Have you acted with wisdom and love?
Then you have succeeded. Have you been paid or praised for it? It doesn’t
matter one bit.
Isocrates understood that each
person is made, raised, and grows in a certain way. He was a true master in the
art of speaking, yet he insisted that the power of rhetoric be joined to
philosophy, to the love of truth. If he had not been given that ability, I am
certain he would have found another way to serve the truth.
In school, they like to give us
aptitude tests, intended to determine how we might manage to make the most
money and win the most fame.
In life, Nature has already given us
an answer, because it is Providence that has made us, with beauty and with
glory in our own special way.
Will you make executive decisions to
change the course of history? Perhaps you may then do some good. Will you show
love to your friends while you clean up the trash? You have then certainly done
some good.
Written in 8/2011
IMAGE: Isocrates
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