Moreover,
we ought not to allow our desires to wander far afield, but we must make them
confine themselves to our immediate neighborhood, since they will not endure to
be altogether locked up.
We
must leave alone things which either cannot come to pass or can only be
effected with difficulty, and follow after such things as are near at hand and
within reach of our hopes, always remembering that all things are equally
unimportant, and that though they have a different outward appearance, they are
all alike empty within.
People
will sometimes tell me I can have everything I want, though I find I must
consider such a statement closely. Can I really have everything? Should I even
want everything?
It is
certainly noble to dream big, to make grand plans, to take daring risks, to face
every endeavor with courage. We say such things to inspire greatness and to
instill confidence, and we wish to make certain that no one becomes any less
than he is capable of being.
Let every
man follow his own best judgment, and let him then achieve whatever might be
within his power. I constantly restrain my vain urges to tell other people how
to live, oftentimes in mid-sentence. I would only ask them kindly to work from
an informed conscience.
Is it
within your power? Far more importantly, is it right to do it? If the former
conflicts with the latter, will you choose power over principle?
For
myself, I know that it is not possible for me to be made of gold, or stand a
thousand feet tall, or turn water into wine, or walk on water, even if I am
just pretending to do so by stepping on other people’s heads.
I can speak
only for myself, but I know precisely when I have gone well beyond my bounds. I
am rightly shamed by it. I vainly demand more than I need, and I arrogantly
think myself more than I am.
What is
necessary for a good life? There are limits to what I can have outside of me,
and the recognition of those limits can hit like a ton of bricks. But there is
no limit to what I can be inside of me. By knowing anything at all, by appreciating
it, by loving it, I have no bounds to the scope of my soul.
I only
run into the same problems, again and again, when I want to make something mine
that isn’t mine to begin with. Let it be what it is. Show it respect, even if
it is what will end me. It has done its part, and I have done my part.
Distinguo. The breadth may be narrow, while the depth is still
limitless.
Written in 10/2011
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