Chapter
8
Let
us now pass on to the consideration of property, that most fertile source of
human sorrows: for if you compare all the other ills from which we suffer—deaths,
sicknesses, fears, regrets, endurance of pains and labors—with those miseries
which our money inflicts upon us, the latter will far outweigh all the others.
Reflect,
then, how much less a grief it is never to have had any money than to have lost
it: we shall thus understand that the less poverty has to lose, the less
torment it has with which to afflict us. For you are mistaken if you suppose
that the rich bear their losses with greater spirit than the poor: a wound
causes the same amount of pain to the greatest and the smallest body.
It
was a neat saying of Bion's, "that it hurts bald men as much as hairy men
to have their hairs pulled out.” You may be assured that the same thing is true
of rich and poor people, that their suffering is equal for their money clings
to both classes, and cannot be torn away without their feeling it.
My first instinct
is to say that troubles arising from romantic love are just as prevalent as
troubles arising from our possessions, but then I remember that so many
problems of the heart actually reduce to problems about money; too many of the
relationships I have seen are ultimately nothing more than means for social and
financial status. Matters of the heart can devolve into matters of the wallet.
I
discovered very quickly that if I was going to follow Stoicism in my life, I
was going to be considered rather strange, and I would often find myself
feeling quite lonely. Most people assume by default, many without ever
reflecting on it, that money is what makes the world go around, that happiness or
misery depend on the security of what we own.
Yet for
Stoicism, at least in its classical sense, it is Providence that makes the
world go around, and it is more than just figurative to say that Providence
acts through love, the will to achieve the good in all things. Yes, love is the
law, not money.
I am not
a psychologist, of course, so I may be spouting complete nonsense, but I have
long wondered what makes people want to be rich. Is it that possessions help us
to better feel pleasure? Is the desire for pleasure, then, the false god we
worship?
Is it that wealth gives us a sense of
importance? Is it vanity, then, that moves us to acquire more and more?
Is it
that property gives us a feeling of power and security? I know that I, for one,
long for money whenever I feel threatened by others. Is it comfort, then, that drives
us to acquire more and more?
I offer
another possibility, only because I have noticed it within myself, whenever I
have the courage to stare into my own soul with honesty. Perhaps it is all wrapped
up with the other models. Whenever I feel empty on the inside, I will habitually
look to what I might acquire on the outside. Discerning my own weakness, I hope
that strength can come from elsewhere.
For the
Stoic, however, property is neither a good thing, nor a bad thing; it is, like
all circumstances, indifferent. The worth of property depends upon the merit of
character. Give a man more, or give him less, but what will matter the most is what
he does with what is given to him.
At the
same time, consider how much easier it will be to resist that temptation to be
greedy, if there is nothing at all to desire. We might assume that the rich
have no worries about their property, but the fact is that they most certainly
do, with bells on. They have more, and they want more, and they have to fight
all the harder to keep more from the rest of us.
If you
have ever had much, you will know that having much leads to wanting more. If
you have ever been rich, you will know that your sense of compassion will so
easily shrivel, as your sense of entitlement will so easily grow.
The rich
man is no more immune to greed than the poor man.
Better,
then, to own little or no property; it might finally be an aid to owning ourselves.
Bion of Borysthenes
surely had it right: it hurts to lose money, and it makes little difference whether
we are rich or poor; the pain is much the same.
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