Living with Nature:
Reflections on the Meditations of Marcus Aurelius 5-6
Liam Milburn
5.1
In the morning when you rise unwillingly, let this thought
be present: I am rising to the work of a human being.
Why
then am I dissatisfied if I am going to do the things for which I exist, and
for which I was brought into the world?
Or
have I been made for this, to lie in the bedclothes and keep myself warm?
“But
this is more pleasant!”
Do
you exist then to take your pleasure, and not at all for action or exertion? Do
you not see the little plants, the little birds, the ants, the spiders, and the
bees working together to put in order their several parts of the Universe? And
are you unwilling to do the work of a human being, and you do not make haste to
do that which is according to your nature?
“But
it is necessary to take rest also!”
It
is necessary, however nature has fixed bounds to this too. She has fixed bounds
both to eating and drinking, and yet you go beyond these bounds, beyond what is
sufficient. Yet in your acts it is not so, but you stop short of what you can
do. So you do not love yourself, for if you did, you would love your nature and
her will.
Those
who love their several arts exhaust themselves in working at them unwashed and
without food, but you value your own nature less than the turner values the
turning art, or the dancer the dancing art, or the lover of money values his
money, or the vainglorious man his little glory.
And
such men, when they have a violent affection for a thing, choose neither to eat
nor to sleep, but rather than to perfect the things that they care for. But are
the acts that concern society more vile in your eyes and less worthy of your
labor?
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 5.1 (tr
Long)
Of all
the topics that are regularly considered in casual conversation, few seem to be
as common as discussing how much we hate getting up for work. Perhaps only
complaints about the weather can come close.
It’s not
hard to see why this is the case. Most everyone will seem to agree, and, like
the weather, we feel as if there’s not much we can do about it in any event. We
carry on, doing what is expected of us, with tired resignation and a twinge of
resentment.
I have
known the feeling well, and upon reflection, it has always been because I have
failed to understand what my work in this life is, and how I can find joy in making
an effort for its sake. It is too easy to seek the gratification of laziness
when I can perceive no real value in activity.
Yes,
there are all of those tasks and chores during the day, all of those obstacle
courses we need to run, so that we can put food on the table and a roof over
our heads. But these things are accessories to life, and not the work of a
human being.
Yes, there
are all the orders and demands given to us by those who are richer or stronger
than we are, and we comply so that we can find ourselves some acceptance and
approval. But these things are conveniences of life, and not the work of a
human being.
Yes, there
are all sorts of skills and careers we may pursue, all of them with their own
specific purpose in making everyone’s life easier. But these things are only an
assistance in life, and not the work of a human being.
When an
ant, or a bee, or any living thing dedicates itself completely to its own task
and place in Nature, it does so out of an instinctive drive to fulfill its very
purpose. Is it sufficient to say that the purpose of a human being is to get a
job, buy things, and stay out of trouble?
If that
is all I have to live for, it should come as no surprise that I will dislike
the very idea of work, and I will prefer to sleep in. The work of a human
being, that which we essentially and universally share in common, is to pursue
virtue, to know what is true and to love what is good, to always think with
compassion and to act with justice. I most certainly wouldn’t want to get out
of bed to crawl along in traffic, shuffle papers, crank out widgets all day, or
get yelled at by the boss, though I will gladly jump up right away to have a
chance to be happy.
That is,
after all, what the work of a human being is, not to become rich or important,
but to be happy, to live with excellence, whatever our different particular
roles in life may be. With that in mind, work, rightly understood, is not a
burden, but a blessed opportunity.
When
people are passionate about what they are doing, and truly love the goals that they
seek, they will gladly put aside most anything else for the sake of that
purpose. Just as the Stoic Turn flips just about everything on its head, it
also redefines the dignity of work, because it redefines the very things in
life that are worth working for.
5.2
How
easy it is to repel and to wipe away every impression that is troublesome or
unsuitable, and immediately to be in all tranquility.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 5.2 (tr
Long)
I often
become stubborn when someone tells me that something important is really quite
easy, especially when I have found the exact same thing to be extremely
difficult in my own efforts. Dwelling upon anger will never lead to good
things.
“Perhaps
it is easy for you, since you are so much better. But for the rest
of us peasants, it’s no walk in the park!”
As
always, it is my own ignorance that is getting in the way, my unwillingness to
think the problem through clearly. It doesn’t matter at all, for my purposes,
what motive someone else may have had in mind when he told it was easy. He may
indeed have been bragging about himself, or as I suspect is the case for Marcus
Aurelius, he may well have been trying to be helpful.
Troublesome
impressions, whether they are immediate feelings, haunting memories of the
past, or worries about the future, are, in and of themselves, completely
powerless over my ability to judge them. They are simply something given,
feelings made present to my awareness. They only achieve any power when I offer
them value in my estimations, and when I allow them to influence my sense of
true and false, good and bad. Then they affect my actions.
A child
may fear the impression of a monster under the bed, a young man may fear the
impression of being unloved, and an old man may fear the impression of failure.
If he only chooses to remove these objects from his attention, because he fully
understands that none of them are important for his living, they will no longer
trouble him.
I am not
troubled, for example, by the impression of seeing people wearing bright colors
or muted colors, or of being tall or short, since those qualities have nothing
to do with their merits. They do not enter into my thinking as being relevant.
It is therefore easy to disregard them.
Now why
does it still seem so difficult to remove other sorts of impressions? The
recollection of that betrayal? Being bullied by important folks? The temptation
of a fifth of bourbon when I feel hopeless?
It isn’t
removing the impression that’s the problem at all, as I can always look the
other way. No, the difficulty is in still wanting
to pay attention. I should never blame the feeling, but I should take
responsibility for what I do with it. I still desire it, from previous habit, because
I haven’t yet chosen to not desire it. Once the commitment is made, wiping away
the impression is indeed easy, but before the commitment is made, wiping away
the impression is nigh impossible. I still want it to be there, after all!
The
feeling isn’t the obstacle. My thinking is the obstacle. And who really
controls that? I’ve usually been attacking it from the wrong end.
5.3
Judge
every word and deed that are according to Nature to be fit for you; and do not be
diverted by the blame which follows from any people, nor by their words, but if
a thing is good to be done or said, do not consider it unworthy of you.
For
those persons have their peculiar leading principle and follow their peculiar
movement. Do not regard these things, but go straight on, following your own
nature and the common Nature; and the way of both is one.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 5.3 (tr
Long)
What
will people think, and what will people say? It is one of those odd habits of
human behavior to take the very thing that defines us, our own thinking and
action, and then immediately allow that to be ruled by the thinking and actions
of others.
It is
something like reducing life to a game of Simon Says, or like a reflection of
the never-ending cycle of new fashions in clothing, music, or politics. Look
around at everyone else, and follow suit.
The
Stoic will never tell you not to listen to others, or not to seek wisdom and
guidance, or not to look to a good example, but he will insist that you do your
own thinking and choosing for yourself. We are all tasked with finding our own
place and playing our own part in the order of Nature, not to find another’s
place or play another’s part.
If I
can, with a conscience that is both humble and confident, know what must be
done to live well, then that is what I should do. I should not be looking at
what happens to be popular, what will bring me anything external, and what will
simply improve my circumstances.
Am I
seeking virtue above all else? That will do. Starting with a sincere effort to
practice the Cardinal Virtues, in the most ordinary and everyday of situations,
is as good a place as any. That is what will improve my nature, and therefore be
in harmony with Nature as a whole.
We often
struggle with what we think is a false opposition between ourselves and other
things. We assume there must be the presence of conflict, that my way and your
way will necessarily disagree, or that cooperation or compromise is settling
for second best.
But this
does not need to be so. I can rest assured that if I do what is right for
myself, living simply as a human being, then I will never need to do any harm
to anyone or anything else.
My own
true benefit is always within the benefit of my neighbor, because he is a
social animal like myself. My own true benefit is always within the benefit of
the entire Universe, because I am a small but integral part of it. They are
always one and the same, even when I refuse to see it. Their ways will always
converge, even when it is not immediately apparent.
People
may pursue values and goals we discern as contrary to Nature, but even such a
use of choice by others, however it may frustrate or sadden us, also serves
Nature. If nothing else, I may use it to commit myself to what is good all the
more.
Providence
has a wonderful way of making right from wrong, of turning obstacles into
opportunities.
5.4
I
go through the things which happen according to Nature until I shall fall and
rest, breathing out my breath into that element out of which I daily draw it
in, and falling upon that earth out of which my father collected the seed, and
my mother the blood, and my nurse the milk. Out of which during so many years I
have been supplied with food and drink, which bears me when I tread on it and
abuse it for so many purposes.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 5.4 (tr
Long)
When I
seek to live according to Nature, I need to remember that this is not merely a
romantic notion, or a noble abstraction, or an intellectual luxury, or some
pleasant diversion from the business of the day. It is the very business of the day, the stuff itself out of which I am
made, to which I am connected, and to which I will return. To embrace Nature,
as it is understood by the Stoic, is never to turn away from everyday living,
but to finally embrace the fullness of everyday living.
As much
as our human endeavors often seem to mask it, everything that we are is
inseparable from the order of Nature, and even our most impressive artificial
posturing would be nothing separately of that harmony. The part has no meaning
without the whole.
I often
notice how strong and independent we think we are, and though we might be quite
adept at this in our time of high technology and social engineering, this was
surely true for the Rome of Marcus Aurelius as well. We eat, drink, breathe,
and consume or manipulate all sorts of the things around us, quite oblivious to
all the deeper relations between them. We pursue our careers and the
improvement of our position in life, quite oblivious to our very human purpose,
and the depth of our bond with other persons.
I think
it is no accident that the same man who pays no attention to the air he
breathes is quite often the same man who pays no attention to the dignity of
his neighbor. He pollutes the one with his waste, and pollutes the other with
his greed.
The
tools of power and vanity only give the illusion of independence. We are just
as bound to everything and everyone else as we have always been. It is
fortunate that Nature is patient with our tantrums and abuses.
The
tension of this passage by Marcus Aurelius, between being necessarily joined to
the unity of all things on the one hand, and my stubborn insistence on breaking
myself away from that unity on the other, or between
being in Nature and yet stepping on it, brings to mind my favorite poem, which I never miss the
opportunity to share:
“God’s
Grandeur”
Gerard
Manley Hopkins
The
world is charged with the grandeur of God.
It
will flame out, like shining from shook foil;
It
gathers to a greatness, like the ooze of oil
Crushed.
Why do men then now not reck his rod?
Generations
have trod, have trod, have trod;
And
all is seared with trade; bleared, smeared with toil;
And
wears man’s smudge and shares man’s smell: the soil
Is
bare now, nor can foot feel, being shod.
And
for all this, nature is never spent;
There
lives the dearest freshness deep down things;
And
though the last lights off the black West went
Oh,
morning, at the brown brink eastward, springs—
Because
the Holy Ghost over the bent
World
broods with warm breast and with ah! bright wings.
5.5
You
say men cannot admire the sharpness of your wits. So be it, but there are many
other things of which you cannot say, that you are not formed for them by
Nature.
Show
those qualities, then, that are altogether in your power: sincerity, gravity,
endurance of labor, aversion to pleasure, contentment with your portion and
with few things, benevolence, frankness, no love of superfluity, freedom from
trifling magnanimity.
Do
you not see how many qualities you are immediately able to exhibit, in which
there is no excuse of natural incapacity and unfitness, and yet you still
remain voluntarily below the mark?
Or
are you compelled through being defectively furnished by Nature to murmur, and
to be stingy, and to flatter, and to find fault with your poor body, and to try
to please men, and to make great display, and to be so restless in thy mind?
No,
by the gods, but you might have been delivered from these things long ago. Only
if in truth you can be charged with being rather slow and dull of
comprehension, you must exert yourself about this also, not neglecting it nor
yet taking pleasure in your dullness.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 5.5 (tr
Long)
I
noticed from very early on, from as soon as they decided to send me to school,
that I was never really thought of as smart, funny, charming, confident, creative,
or handsome. I also learned very quickly that these were the very qualities we
are expected to admire in others. We tend to choose our friends, our lovers,
and our colleagues by precisely those measures. We also believe we will become
successful, popular, and rich precisely because we possess such things.
In
hindsight, I maintained a remarkable sense of optimism during those years. When
I realized that emulating such characteristics wasn’t in the cards, I did my
best to work with being myself, and hoping that this could make up for the
absence of all the rest. There were a few times when it worked, but far too
many times it didn’t, and at one point the imbalance simply broke me inside.
Then, as
so many will sadly do, I started to complain, to become angry, and to feel
sorry for myself. I would put everything I had within me into an endeavor, and
I would find it completely rejected or ignored. I would become frustrated when
those who were successful, precisely because of their natural gifts, would be dismissive
of the fact that I wasn’t just like them.
My
mistake was threefold. First, I did not understand what true success even was.
Second, I did not understand what qualities were actually necessary to achieve true
success. Third, I did not understand that those qualities were hardly beyond my
power. That was why I was discontent and despondent.
Success
is not what I may receive from my efforts, but what I may give from my efforts.
Of all
the qualities I may possess, the only one necessary for true success is virtue.
Virtue
is always something I can do for myself, regardless of whatever circumstances
or gifts I may or may not have.
Let’s
say I’m not terribly clever, or outgoing, or good-looking. I can gladly accept
what I may have, and work to improve it to the best that it can be. Is my mind
slow? Am I socially awkward? Do I look hideous to others? There are certainly
things I can do to make those things better, in however small a way.
The
danger facing me is neglecting what is given entirely, or just sitting back and
feeling miserable about it.
Even
then, these qualities aren’t the essential ones, and what other people think
about them is neither here nor there. There is no need to buy any more options
or accessories. Everything life needs come standard.
Can I be
thoughtful, loving, and grateful in all of my dealings? It takes nothing
special to do these things. Put the proverbial dunce cap on my head, and I can
still do them.
I will
only choose to be ignorant, hateful, and demanding when I am dissatisfied with
who I might be, and I expect to receive whatever I feel jealous about in
others.
When I
was in the Boy Scouts, I had one of the most wonderful Scoutmasters there could
ever be. I once told him that I felt inferior, because I couldn’t always do the
things the other Scouts, who were physically stronger and emotionally more
confident, could manage to do. He gave me one of the kindest looks I’ve seen,
not one of condescension, but one of complete understanding.
“Not
everyone can do everything,” he said, “but anyone can do anything that matters.
Can you recite the Scout Law for me?”
That I
could. “A Scout is trustworthy, loyal, helpful, friendly, courteous,
kind, obedient, cheerful, thrifty, brave, clean, and reverent.”
“Can you
do those things?”
I
hesitated. “I think so?”
“No, can
you do them? Yes or no?”
“Yes.”
“Will
you do them? Yes or no? I don’t care how far you can swim, or how good you are
at math, or how many matches it takes for you to light a fire.”
“Yes.”
“Then
you’re a Scout, and one of the best. The rest is just window dressing.” I still
use that phrase to this day, thanks to him.
Not
everyone has the tools to be a big man, but everyone has the tools to be a good
man. Am I smart, funny, charming, confident, creative, or handsome? Not really.
Am I simply decent? Only I can decide that.
5.6
One
man, when he has done a service to another, is ready to set it down to his
account as a favor conferred.
Another
is not ready to do this, but still in his own mind he thinks of the man as his
debtor, and he knows what he has done.
A
third in a manner does not even know what he has done, but he is like a vine
that has produced grapes, and seeks for nothing more after it has once produced
its proper fruit.
As
a horse when he has run, a dog when he has tracked the game, a bee when it has
made the honey, so a man when he has done a good act, does not call out for
others to come and see, but he goes on to another act, as a vine goes on to
produce again the grapes in season.
Must
a man then be one of these, who in a manner act thus without observing it? Yes,
but this very thing is necessary, the observation of what a man is doing. For,
it may be said, it is characteristic of the social animal to perceive that he
is working in a social manner, and indeed to wish that his social partner also
should perceive it.
It
is true what you say, but you do not rightly understand what is now said. And
for this reason you will become one of those of whom I spoke before, for even
they are misled by a certain show of reason. But if you will choose to understand
the meaning of what is said, do not fear that for this reason you will omit any
social act.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 5.6 (tr
Long)
The good
or bad within my actions will come not only from what I do, but also from the
disposition with which I do it. Merit is not only in the deed, but also in its
relationship to the doer.
Some
people will expect payment for an act of kindness, which, of course, ceases to
make it a kindness. It is actually a transaction. I should be able to recognize
such people immediately, because they will always attach conditions to the
giving of their gifts, which now makes them investments, and terms for their
promises, which now makes them contracts.
When the
good of another becomes a means for my own profit, this is no longer really a
good deed.
Other
people may not demand any external compensation in return, so I may more
readily think of this as an expression of sincerity. I should not so quickly
deceive myself. They are also seeking something else in return, an internal
sense of thinking well of themselves, of self-praise, of importance and
superiority, It is what my great-grandmother used to call “lording it over”
someone.
When the
goal is gratification instead of service, this still isn’t really a good deed.
There
are people, however, for whom the goodness of the act is itself its own
purpose, where action and intention are in complete convergence. They do what
they should do, because it fulfills their very nature, and is for the benefit
of all of Nature. I can recognize such people because they do not need
recognition. They are content to simply produce good and abundant fruit.
When the
deed is rightly done, nothing more is required. One gladly moves forward to the
next opportunity to be of service.
Marcus
Aurelius offers a qualification here, however, so that we do not misunderstand.
The horse will run, the dog will hunt, and the vine will produce fruit from
instinct, with no conscious reflection on those actions. They do not know what
they are doing in the same way that human beings do, and they are simply moved
to do so. Human nature, however, adds the power of reason into the mix.
I should
certainly do well for only its own sake, seeking no further reward or
gratification. Yet this does not mean that I should not be aware of what I do
and why I do it, or that others should not be aware of what I do and why I do
it. The good sought for itself does not exclude a perception of that good, as
is so fitting and necessary for all human action.
Simply
put, because I should never do good only so that it can be observed, does not
mean I and others should not observe that I am doing good. Humility is not the
same thing as ignorance, and while a man should always be humble, he should
never be ignorant.
Be like
the vine that produces good fruit without expecting anything in return, but be
more than the vine in perceiving how and why it is good fruit.
5.7
A
prayer of the Athenians: Rain, rain, O dear Zeus, down on the ploughed fields
of the Athenians and on the plains.
In
truth we ought not to pray at all, or we ought to pray in this simple and noble
fashion.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 5.7 (tr
Long)
I am
always hesitant to discuss prayer, or religion, precisely because it is both so
powerful and so personal. Stoicism, however, is very much a “big tent”
philosophy, and Stoic thinking can be of great assistance in however we may choose
to understand God.
Prayer,
in the broadest sense our communication with the Divine, can surely be a
profound means of relating ourselves to what is absolute, but it can also be
fraught with danger. Prayer can be a humble expression of praise, thanksgiving,
or supplication. It can also too easily become twisted into a form of showmanship,
vanity, or bargaining.
How easy
it is to turn prayer into a spectacle. I know something has gone wrong when a
prayer becomes a performance, something made public instead of private, a way to
excite the passions and manipulate the thinking of others.
How easy
it is to turn prayer into a worship of the self. I know something has gone
wrong when a prayer is suddenly about man dwelling on his own importance, about
making himself seem big, instead of making himself a part of what is bigger.
How easy
it is to turn prayer into a means for getting what I desire. I know something
has gone wrong when a prayer is an arrogant attempt to make things exist only
for our gratification, and no longer a respect for Providence.
I have
always kept in mind the insight that prayer isn’t something that is supposed to
change God, but rather something that is supposed to change the way I relate
myself to God. From a Stoic perspective, it is never within my power to
determine Providence, even as it is within my power to freely participate with
Providence.
Don’t
give me what I think I want. Give me what You know I need. A prayer is not
something to which I should add my own conditions, as if I was negotiating a
sale. There’s a good reason I was taught as a child to pray with only four
simple words: “Thy will be done.”
I think
of all the people I have known who have turned their prayer into a mockery, and
I think of all the times I have come far too close to doing the same myself. I
once knew someone for whom God suddenly appeared after she had already decided
something; it was quite amazing how He would miraculously communicate His
agreement with her.
I once
knew someone else whose prayers always seemed to be a way to degrade anyone he
disagreed with, and for whom religion was nothing more than an expression of an
ideology for the privileged, a war between “us” and “them”. “Do it may way” and
“slay my enemies” are hardly dignified prayers.
If I do choose
to pray, my prayer should be simple and noble, and never designed to impress
others, glorify myself, or make demands of anyone or anything. As Marcus
Aurelius says, I should limit myself to being open to receive, and to be
grateful for, what Nature has to give.
5.8
Just
as we must understand when it is said, that Asclepius prescribed to this man
horse-exercise, or bathing in cold water, or going without shoes, so we must
understand it when it is said, that the nature of the Universe prescribed to
this man disease, or mutilation, or loss or anything else of the kind.
For
in the first case prescribed means something like this: he prescribed this for
this man as a thing adapted to procure health. And in the second case it means:
That which happens to every man is fixed in a manner for him suitably to his
destiny.
For
this is what we mean when we say that things are suitable to us, as the workmen
say of squared stones in walls or the pyramids, that they are suitable, when
they fit them to one another in some kind of connection. For there is
altogether one fitness, one harmony.
And
as the Universe is made up out of all bodies to be such a body as it is, so out
of all existing causes necessity is made up to be such a cause as it is. And
even those who are completely ignorant understand what I mean, for they say, destiny
brought this to such a person. This then was brought and this was prescribed to
him. Let us then receive these things, as well as those that Asclepius
prescribes.
Many,
as a matter of course, among even his prescriptions are disagreeable, but we
accept them in the hope of health. Let the perfecting and accomplishment of the
things, which the common Nature judges to be good, be judged by you to be of
the same kind as your health. And so accept everything that happens, even if it
seems disagreeable, because it leads to this, to the health of the Universe and
to the prosperity and felicity of Zeus.
For
he would not have brought on any man what he has brought, if it were not useful
for the whole. Neither does the nature of anything, whatever it may be, cause anything
that is not suitable to that which is directed by it.
For
two reasons then it is right to be content with that which happens to you. The
one, because it was done for you and prescribed for you, and in a manner had
reference to you, originally from the most ancient causes spun with your
destiny. The other, because even that which comes severally to every man is to
the power which administers the Universe a cause of felicity and perfection,
even of its very continuance.
For
the integrity of the whole is mutilated, if you cut off anything whatever from
the conjunction and the continuity either of the parts or of the causes. And you
do cut off, as far as it is in your power, when you art dissatisfied, and in a
manner try to put anything out of the way.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 5.8 (tr
Long)
This
passage from Marcus Aurelius was for me, quite literally, a lifesaver. I
happened upon it at a time when I was in such pain that I could not make it
through the day without collapsing into uncontrollable sobbing. People try to
tell us that it will get better, and that it will all end up for the best. They
surely mean well, but that is of little comfort when the suffering is
crippling. But instead of just patting me on the back and tossing out a phrase
that tells me my situation will change, Marcus Aurelius explains himself. He tells
me why whatever happens always
happens for a reason, and always happens because it is good both for me and for
the whole world.
It isn’t
even about wanting to change the situation, but understanding that any
situation can always be a source of benefit, if it is only understood and
applied rightly.
In the
words of Ovid:
Endure and persist; this pain
will one day do good for you.
The
passage helped me to apply the Stoic Turn in a profound way, and reading it
suddenly and unexpectedly gave me a whole new perspective. It didn’t make the
pain cease, but it gave me the means to find purpose within it. That moment
wasn’t, of course, the end of the story, even as it was the beginning of the
story.
It all
revolves around the central Stoic principle that we are not measured by our
circumstances, however extreme they may be. We are measured by our own
thoughts, choices, and actions about those circumstances. Instead of dwelling
on what was coming at me from outside, I could rather ask how what came at me
from outside could be transformed into something different on the inside. My
task wasn’t merely to suffer; my task was to discover how to find benefit for
myself through that suffering.
If I
came to recognize that the only thing that was unconditionally good for me was
my character, then I could ask myself how the things that were happening could
help to build that character, and in turn give me peace and joy. There were
many things I hated about the world, and many more things that I hated about
myself, but the only thing I ever found of value within myself was my ability,
however meager, to love. And it dawned on me that whatever love was within now
me had only been nurtured through my grief. If pain had not broken my cynicism
and disdain, my heart would still have been smothered and neglected.
The very
quality I treasured within me had come about from suffering. What seemed so bad
had been so good all along. I had, without even fully understanding it at the
time, made something worthwhile out of something painful.
This was
true for me, and also for everything around me. Once I began to understand that
the world is not a series of random and unconnected events, I also began to
understand that every cause and every effect, and every part within the whole,
is precisely where it is meant to be. Everything plays its own distinct role,
the good within each thing serving the good of all things.
I had to
smile when I put the book down, because I realized I hadn’t even happened upon the
passage at all. I had been meant to read it from long before I was even born.
It was another small step in finding the path I needed to follow for myself.
When
Asclepius, the god of medicine, or just my neighborhood doctor, prescribes a
cure, it isn’t always going to be pleasant. Sometimes it will seem worse than
the disease. But the doctor prescribes medicine to help us become healthy, just
as Providence prescribes our circumstances to help us become better, wiser, and
happier.
5.9
Do
not be disgusted, or discouraged, or dissatisfied, if you do not succeed in
doing everything according to right principles; but when you have failed,
return back again, and be content if the greater part of what you do is
consistent with man's nature, and love this to which you return.
And
do not return to philosophy as if she were a master, but act like those who
have sore eyes and apply a bit of sponge and egg, or as another applies a
plaster, or drenching with water. For thus you will not fail to obey reason,
and you will repose in it.
And
remember that philosophy requires only the things that your nature requires,
but you would have something else that is not according to Nature.
It
may be objected, why something is more agreeable than this that I am doing? But
is not this the very reason why pleasure deceives us? And consider if
magnanimity, freedom, simplicity, equanimity, piety, are not more agreeable.
For what is more agreeable than wisdom itself, when you think of the security
and the happy course of all things that depend on the faculty of understanding
and knowledge?
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 5.9 (tr
Long)
We will
often grow resentful when we feel that others have done us wrong, and we will
often turn that same instinct inwards, growing resentful of ourselves when we
feel that we have failed.
As with
any situation I may face, I can choose to dwell upon what is wrong with it, or
I can choose to build upon what is right with it. A step taken in the wrong
direction need never be the end of it, but can be a reminder to go back the way
I came, and a mistake can simply serve to highlight the distinction between what
is given by Nature and what is extraneous through my vanity.
I don’t
need to assume that a correction must be harsh and demeaning. Rightly
understood, a correction is like a relief, a much-needed cure and comfort from
what ails me. I was never, for example, able to understand people in authority
who thought that insult and injury would make others work harder or better. I
always found myself more encouraged when I was told how well it could be done,
instead of how poorly it had been done. Why should I be angry with others, when
I could nurture them? Why be angry with myself, when I could nurture myself?
I will
fear failure because I assume success is something beyond me, something I
simply can’t do. Now that may well be true when it comes to the success of
honors and careers, of winning a football game or making millions in high
finance. It is, however, most certainly not true when it comes to being
successful at humanity. No skill, no strength, no tool is required that has not
already been given by Nature. I may not be good enough for everything, but I am
more than good enough for that. I get myself in trouble when I seek more than I
really need.
No
matter. Dispose of the unnecessary, and let my awareness that it is unnecessary
serve as a marker for what is necessary.
A
perfect instance of this is whenever I start thinking that it is necessary to
first seek pleasure. I am impressed by its immediacy, but then sorely
disappointed by the fact that it is never complete. It does not fulfill who I
am as a person, and it requires a dependence upon the feelings that proceed
from other things, indicating precisely how I am neglecting essential aspects
of what is already within my nature, and also adding other things to my nature
that are not required.
When I
am tempted by gratification alone, I only need to ask myself what it is that
truly comes from me, and what it is that has very little to do with me at all.
This is how I can get myself back on track, by relying upon my actions, not
becoming enslaved to my passions. Virtue is always more agreeable, because it
proceeds from a mastery of self, while pleasure is less agreeable, because it so
easily causes me to lose myself.
5.10
Things
are in such a kind of envelopment that they have seemed to philosophers, not a
few nor those common philosophers, altogether unintelligible; no, even to the
Stoics themselves they seem difficult to understand.
And
all of our assent is changeable, for where is the man who never changes? Carry
your thoughts then to the objects themselves, and consider how short-lived they
are and worthless, and that they may be in the possession of a filthy wretch,
or a whore, or a robber.
Then
turn to the morals of those who live with you, and it is hardly possible to
endure even the most agreeable of them, to say nothing of a man being hardly
able to endure himself.
In
such darkness then and dirt, and in so constant a flux both of substance and of
time, and of motion and of things moved, what there is worth being highly
prized or even an object of serious pursuit, I cannot imagine.
But
on the contrary it is a man's duty to comfort himself, and to wait for the
natural dissolution and not to be vexed at the delay, but to rest in these
principles only.
The
one, that nothing will happen to me which is not conformable to the Nature of
the Universe, and the other, that it is in my power never to act contrary to my
god and daemon, for there is no man who will compel me to this.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 5.10 (tr
Long)
Our
circumstances are constantly changing around us, just as our own thoughts and
feelings are constantly changing within us, and such variability can easily
lead us to uncertainty and doubt. It is then far too easy to say that the world
makes no sense, even as we should know that difficult things are not impossible
things. The solution can only be to cling to those things in life that are
reliable, and never to confuse them with those things that are totally
unreliable.
Each
year added to my life has shown me more and more how passing and fleeting the objects
outside of me are, and this in turn reminds me that I would be foolish to
depend upon anything that comes and goes so quickly.
At first
the changes may seem negligible, but before I know it, only a few relics and
collapsing ruins remain. They will also be gone before too long. I then have
that occasional moment where I realize, with a combination of awe and dread,
that I am quite the relic and collapsing ruin myself.
There is
nothing to be truly prized here.
I look
at how people around me are thinking and living, and I see how many of them are
hardly thinking at all, or are thinking based on sophistry and illusion. Just
when I believe I could never find ideas and values any more absurd, whole new
crops of trendy prejudices prove me wrong.
What we
were supposed to think was unquestioned truth last year is now an abomination,
and this year’s ideological craze will be on tomorrow’s rubbish heap. I’m not
sure if I should find it all ridiculous or frightening, and then I catch a
glimpse of just how much I am subject to the ebb and flow as anyone else.
There is
nothing to be truly prized here.
With
such a state of affairs, it is no wonder that we frantically rush to grab what
little we can, or resignedly play along with the game, or surrender entirely,
and quietly fade away. Where can there be comfort in the middle of all this
impermanence?
Philosophies
that try to find meaning in corruptible circumstances will inevitably fail.
Here Stoicism has an advantage, because it offers principles I can always count
on, whatever may come and go, on the outside and on the inside.
These
principles are clear and simple enough:
If
Nature permits it to happen, I can always find a way to make good of it.
I can
always make good of anything, since how I choose to think and act is completely
within my power, and within no one else’s.
To live
with virtue, and to avoid vice, is something distinctly mine for as long as I
live, and it can allow me to return peacefully back into the Nature that
produced me, content with a job well done. That is absolutely reliable.
5.11
About
what am I now employing my own soul?
On
every occasion, I must ask myself this question, and inquire, what I now have
in this part of me that they call the ruling principle?
And
whose soul do I have now? That of a child, or of a young man, or of a feeble
woman, or of a tyrant, or of a domestic animal, or of a wild beast?
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 5.11 (tr
Long)
When we
are asked to identify ourselves, we will usually respond by explaining our
careers, our honors, or our friends. We may add where we came from, the
importance of our position right now, and the places we would like to be in the
future.
Yet
these things are about our relationships with externals, with qualities and
dispositions that are in themselves completely indifferent. Even when we speak
of our attitudes, or our goals and dreams, we are still referring them to what
will happen to us, not the bare measure of simply what we are thinking and
doing. There is a world of difference between saying that “I will work honestly
to get a promotion” and saying simply that “I will be honest.”
The
questions of “who am I?” or “what am I doing?” are quite regularly deflected.
It is as if the self is nothing more than a consequence of everything else
around me. The Stoics regularly spoke of the soul or the mind, that power of
reason by which I may judge and decide, as the ruling principle. Yet as soon as
my soul is defined by what happens to me, and not by my action, it is no longer
a ruling principle, but a principle of being ruled.
I knew a
fellow who explained to me that his entire life had been planned around a
carefully designed professional path. He would start by making a name for
himself in private law practice, and then find a job working in government,
preferably in a way that made him appear as a selfless public servant.
From
there, he had two options, either getting appointed as a judge, or winning
election to public office. It would finish off with sitting on a corporate board
of directors, or becoming a university president. Everything else, his
education, his home, his friends, and his family, was all a part of this plan.
He was quite proud to explain the details. I could only bring myself to smile
and nod, though I sensed he wanted me to congratulate him.
By all
means, get elected to public office, or become an airline pilot, or serve ice
cream. We may have gifts or preferences for any number of roles or occupations,
but all of this is incidental to our primary task of being human. The question
I should always ask myself is how I am making something of my own character,
not how I am making something of myself in the eyes of others.
What is
it that is truly within me? Whatever the circumstances I may find myself in,
how am I choosing to live? How am I distinguishing true from false, and right
from wrong? Will I try to be a good man, whether they make me a king or throw
me out into the street?
“But I
want to be the king, and not get thrown into the street!” That would indeed be
more pleasant, but as soon as I make that my goal, I have surrendered my ruling
principle. I have made the excellence of my actions subservient to the
desirability of my conditions.
Strip
away all the trappings, and look at what is underneath the social cosmetics. Am
I a good man, striving to be understanding, compassionate and fair, committed to
pursuing what is right, always maintaining discipline over myself? Or am I
close-minded, heartless and selfish, a coward and a deceiver, ruled by my
desires?
What
kind of man am I living like within my soul? Or perhaps I am not even living
the life of a man, but that of a beast?
“Who am
I?” No more and no less than how much I am willing to put anything and
everything on the line, right here and now, to rule myself with virtue.
5.12
What
kind of things those are that appear good to the many, we may learn even from
this.
For
if any man should conceive certain things as being really good, such as
prudence, temperance, justice, and fortitude, he would not after having first
conceived these endure to listen to anything which should not be in harmony with
what is really good.
But
if a man has first conceived as good the things that appear to the many to be
good, he will listen and readily receive as very applicable that which was said
by the comic writer. Thus even the many perceive the difference.
For
were it not so, this saying would not offend and would not be rejected in the
first case, while we receive it when it is said of wealth, and of the means
which further luxury and fame, as said fitly and wittily.
Go
on, then, and ask if we should value and think those things to be good, to
which after their first conception in the mind the words of the comic writer
might be aptly applied—that he who has them, through pure abundance has not a
place to ease himself in.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 5.12 (tr
Long)
I will
sometimes feel like we live in an age overrun with too much satire, mockery,
and ridicule, though even the briefest survey of history will remind me that
people have always been drawn in by the abuse of humor to dismiss and degrade.
I suspect I simply notice it so much around me, and therefore assume it is a
sign of the times, because I have often come to recognize it as a form of
self-importance through cruelty.
The
problem is hardly about laughing, but rather about laughing at others, instead of laughing with them. That distinction is clearly
drawn by our intentions. Friends will laugh and joke together, but among
enemies, one will laugh while the other grits his teeth.
I have
always been a committed trickster and joker, much like my father, and I have
sometimes managed to pull off the most involved of gags, at the expense of both
others and myself. I usually work with a
straight face and just a touch of subtle sarcasm. Yet few things fill me with
regret as much as having ended up being brutally offensive, in a terribly
failed attempt at being amusing. A bad joke told to the first girl I ever
danced with cost me what could well have been my first date. I hope you’ve
managed to forgive me by now, Jennifer.
Marcus
Aurelius observes how the way we use humor reveals quite a bit about what we
know is truly right and good, whether explicitly or implicitly. We are all
quite ready to make fun of the things that vulgar people care about, and even
vulgar people themselves will hoot and holler about their own vices. “It’s
funny because it’s so true!”
But most
people, unless they are deeply disturbed, will never find it amusing to mock decency.
We can laugh about vices, but there’s really nothing to laugh about with
virtue. A greedy lawyer is completely hilarious, but a compassionate lawyer is
just a nice fellow, if you can manage to find one. You can pull off a joke
about a priest if he is a drunk or a lecher, but you can’t pull off a joke
about a priest if he is humble and pious. People who love
money and fame are fair game, but people who love their neighbors not so much.
Ned Flanders is really only funny as a foil to Homer Simpson.
Whenever
anyone tries to be funny about what is right and good, most people will either
shrug and turn away, or become indignant and offended.
Even in
the most irreverent of times and places, there is that line we must not cross.
When I was younger, my friends and I would joke about most anything. Personal
quirks, annoying habits and attitudes, sex, politics, even the questionable
topics of culture and race, were fair game in our circle.
There
were two places, however, we did not dare to go, unless we wanted a good
beating. I imagine it has long been much the same for most fun-loving men,
whether they are solid guys or scoundrels.
One did
not joke about another man’s religion, and one did not joke about the women in
a man’s life. That included his wife, but especially his sisters and his
mother. This says a little something about what my crowd thought was genuinely
good in life.
The
specifics may differ, but the principle remains the same. One way we can
distinguish good from bad is that we don’t stand for the mockery of what is
truly good.
Now one
reason I will feel uncomfortable with what passes as contemporary humor is how
I perceive that line moving dangerously close, or being ignored entirely. Even
then, however, what seems an exception is just another modification of the
rule. Again, when we twist humor simply to insult and belittle those we
dislike, we can only manage it by giving them bad attributes, whether they are
real or imagined. We make fun of an honest man by suggesting he is really a hypocrite,
or a kind man by saying he is actually obsequious.
Humor
can be a very subjective thing, and a very touchy thing, and we can either use
it well or abuse it. Whatever the case, it always exposes something about our
real values.
5.13
I
am composed of the formal and the material; and neither of them will perish
into non-existence, as neither of them came into existence out of
non-existence.
Every
part of me then will be reduced by change into some part of the Universe, and
that again will change into another part of the Universe, and so on forever.
And
by consequence of such a change I too exist, and those who begot me, and so on
for ever in the other direction. For nothing hinders us from saying so, even if
the Universe is administered according to definite periods of revolution.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 5.13 (tr
Long)
The
stress upon the unity of all things in Stoicism has always spoken to me,
especially because we all too readily slide into the completely opposite direction
of highlighting division and difference. The many are only possible through the
measure of the one, and distinctions are only possible through the measure of
what is shared.
This
passage helps me to remember that the unity of all things is not only for this
moment, but binds together all moments. It surrounds me here and now, and also
passes forward and backwards, into all that was and all that will be.
Stoic
principles can admit of many different perspectives on the structure of the
physical Universe, or on the essence of the Divine, or on human immortality.
Whatever specific views we might hold, however, Stoicism will always insist
that nothing ever completely begins or completely ceases, because everything
that changes proceeds from something else, and then into something else.
In this
sense, I can know that who I am, the active principle of having a certain
identity, and what I am made of, the passive principle of the matter out of
which I am composed, does not merely come to an end. Both of these principles
continue, even as they are transformed into different states.
My own
attempts at understanding and practicing Stoicism have been private for most of
my life, largely because so much of what Stoicism speaks to for me is so deeply
personal. At the same time, however, I am also careful about discussing Stoic
thinking with others because of the responses it can elicit.
Some
will assume that Stoicism is like a cult or organized religion, which is hardly
the case. Others will assume that Stoic principles necessarily contradict
certain things they might already believe in.
I have
been told that Stoic are atheists, even though the entire tradition has always
had a central place for the Divine and for Providence, and is compatible with a
wide range of theistic views. I have been told that Stoics are materialists,
though this usually considers the definition of matter far more narrowly than
the Stoics did. I have been told that Stoics are determinists, yet the Stoics
always understood that human freedom does not contradict fate, but rather
exists completely within it.
I have
also been told that Stoics don’t believe in the immortality of the soul, and so
a Christian, or a Muslim, or a Hindu, for instance, couldn’t possibly accept
anything Stoic.
Now read
the above passage again, and recognize that Marcus Aurelius is clearly saying
that everything about who I am will never cease, both in matter and in form. Again,
Stoicism is a broad philosophy, and can accommodate a variety of
interpretations, and exist within other traditions, and it only insists here
that there will always be a “me”, though necessarily changed in some
fundamental way. We can always say more about how that may take place, but I suggest that the Stoic will leave
those specifics to you.
The
unity of all things necessarily tells me that there is also a continuity to all
things, and the unity of all things also tells me never to assume conflict and
disagreement where there can be balance and harmony.
5.14
Reason
and the reasoning art are powers that are sufficient for themselves and for
their own works.
They
move then from a first principle which is their own, and they make their way to
the end which is proposed to them; and this is the reason why such acts are
named catorthoseis or right
acts, which word signifies that they proceed by the right road.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 5.14 (tr
Long)
Observe
how many of the things we allow to guide our lives involve us being determined
by those very things. If I follow my desire for pleasure, it is the objects of
pleasure that rule me. If I seek to accumulate possessions, what I think I own
ends up owning me. If I wish to be loved and esteemed, the thinking of others
replaces my thinking.
In any
case like this, where the value of the self is viewed through something else,
there is a certain surrender of awareness, of estimation, of deliberate choice.
I am no longer setting the conditions for happiness, but allowing my happiness
to be conditioned. It will often take on that feeling of walking through life
in a mindless haze, bumped back and forth, drawn in by the carrot but fearing
the stick.
The
Stoic understands that behind our passions, our bodies, and the world of others
around us, there is the power of reason. This allows me not only to be aware of
other things, but also to be aware of myself, and thereby to rule myself.
Action need not follow from instinct or habit alone, because judgment follows
from an act of conscious choice.
Only as
a creature of reason am I deciding, instead of having it decided for me.
Beginning
with the power to grasp what is true and good, given to it by Nature, the mind
can proceed to identify the purpose of being human, and how that purpose can be
fulfilled. It provides the end, as well as ordering the means toward that end;
right thinking is what points our acts in the right direction.
Through
all of this process the mind is sufficient for itself, moving under its own
power, ordering its own thoughts, making its own decisions. It will only lose
such independence when it defers judgment to something other than itself, when
it chooses not to decide.
Being
gifted with reason is something like being able to drive myself down the road,
instead of having to rely on being driven by someone else. Most American
teenagers understand this all too well, because they have places they want to
go, without the means to get there themselves. Getting that driver’s license is
seen as a symbol of freedom, but with it must also come a realization of the
responsibility that comes with such freedom.
There is
great power in being able to follow my own road. It also remains entirely up to
my own thinking if I will be wise enough to choose the right road.
5.15
None
of these things ought to be called a man's, that do not belong to a man, as
man. They are not required of a man, nor does man's nature promise them, nor
are they the means of man's nature attaining his end.
Neither
then does the end of man lie in these things, nor yet that which aids to the
accomplishment of this end, and that which aids towards this end is that which
is good.
Besides,
if any of these things did belong to man, it would not be right for a man to
despise them and to set himself against them.
Nor
would a man be worthy of praise, who showed that he did not want these things,
nor would he who stinted himself in any of them be good, if indeed these things
were good.
But
now the more of these things a man deprives himself of, or of other things like
them, or even when he is deprived of any of them, the more patiently he endures
the loss, just in the same degree he is a better man.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 5.15 (tr
Long)
Ask
anyone what he considers to be rightly his own, and he will almost always list
his property, his worldly achievements, or his family.
Yet,
from a Stoic perspective, he owns none of these things. They may well be things
in his life, but they are not the
things that make his life. They are
not his at all. Consider them as something lent to him, not as something
deeded. When Fortune gives gifts, we really only borrow them, and none of us
can claim any rights to them at all.
“But
it’s my house!”
No, it’s
the house you happen to reside in right now, and just as you think you won it
by paying a price to others, others can just as well take it back from you on
their own terms.
“But
she’s my wife!”
All
legal questions aside, is she your friend? I would hope she would be, but
whether or not she loves you is entirely up to her. You should rightly always
love her, but that never makes her yours.
“But I
earned it!”
You
earned nothing. You were given things, like money, titles, and respect, because
others thought it would serve their interest to tickle your own interest. Watch
what happens the very moment you are no longer of any use to your superiors.
Your money, titles, and respect will disappear in an instant.
Such realizations
will only be discouraging to those people who define themselves through
everything outside of themselves. They are, however, deeply encouraging to
those people who define themselves by who they are, and not by what others make
of them.
The things
I call my possessions are not mine. My status among others is not mine. The
people I call my friends are not mine. I only own myself.
And what
does that involve? It means very little from one perspective, and quite a bit
from another. The breadth of my power, property, or influence never belonged to
me.
Even my
pleasures and pains never really belonged to me, because others may decide to
give or withhold them. Even my own body never really belonged to me, because
others may use force to restrain it. Even the length of my life itself never
really belonged to me, because others may choose to snuff it out in an instant.
If for a
moment you think that isn’t true, read the daily news, and you will see immediately
how none of these things are certain for any of us. Only entitled people think
of them as guaranteed. They think they have paid for their rights, but they
have only paid for their illusions.
Only one
thing is guaranteed. For whatever time I have, under whatever circumstances are
given, however great or small, I have the choice to think and act as I decide.
No one else determines that. I used to think that this narrowed the scope of my
being, but I now understand that it gives me everything that I need. It is my
finite participation in what is infinite.
Deprive
me of the things you think I need, and I may well squirm, and I may well
complain. I can, however, endure the loss, since you have not touched me at
all. I am only the sum of my own actions, the things within my own power. You
have made yourself worse, and given me a chance to be better.
“It’s
mine” takes on a whole new meaning when you’ve made the Stoic Turn.
5.16
Such
as are your habitual thoughts, such also will be the character of your mind,
for the soul is dyed by the thoughts.
Dye
it then with a continuous series of such thoughts as these:
For
instance, that where a man can live, there he can also live well. But he must
live in a palace? Well then, he can also live well in a palace.
And
again, consider that for whatever purpose each thing has been constituted, for
this it has been constituted, and towards this it is carried, and its end is in
that towards which it is carried. And where the end is, there also is the
advantage and the good of each thing.
Now
the good for the reasonable animal is society, for that we are made for society
has been shown above. Is it not plain that the inferior exists for the sake of
the superior? But the things that have life are superior to those that have not
life, and of those that have life the superior are those that have reason.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 5.16 (tr
Long)
I would
often sneer when people spoke about the power of positive or negative thinking,
because I would still practice being dismissive as a misguided means of
protection. If I could scoff at it, or roll my eyes, or ignore it entirely, I
could make things that felt uncomfortable seem to disappear.
What a
funny thing, there I was, proving the very point I was claiming to cast aside.
I was managing only the negative side, of course, and it would take the
discipline of Stoicism to learn far more about the positive side.
I began
to see more and more how deeply thinking shapes living, and how powerful habit
is at solidifying such thinking. I saw how harmful my earlier bitterness had
been, and I saw how beneficial my later acceptance was starting to be. It
sometimes felt like I was transforming the world itself, though I was actually
just doing a thorough rebuilding of myself, and how I looked out at that world.
Keeping
those thoughts constant throughout the day, and not just as a luxury for times
of leisure and reflection, has always been a key element for me. At first I
would need to deliberately, sometimes quite forcefully, push certain values
into the front of my awareness when I faced a difficulty. As time went on,
however, these became more of a second nature, and they could arise
spontaneously.
The
examples of good thoughts Marcus Aurelius offers are ones I have always needed
to remember.
It is
always within my grasp to live with excellence, regardless of where, or under
what conditions, that might be. Once I brag or complain about my surroundings,
I have succumbed to my surroundings. I know I am on the right track when I see
how luxury can be just as much of a hindrance as poverty, if only I permit it
to do so.
I am
able to live with excellence only because I can keep in mind the very purpose
for which I exist. If I am acting to acquire, to consume, or to be gratified, I
am forgetting that purpose. The right reason for choice and action must always
be there in my immediate awareness, and I must not allow anything else to sway
me.
Through
all of this, while Stoic principles proceed from self-reliance, I must never
confuse such an independence of thinking with an isolation or separation from
others. Because I am a creature of reason, I can understand how my own purpose
is joined with the purpose of my neighbor. We are made for cooperation, not
conflict; we are here to assist one another, not to fight one another.
Always
discerning the difference between greater and lesser things, in every
situation, is necessary if I wish to have right thoughts lead to right action.
5.17
To
seek what is impossible is madness, and it is impossible that the bad should
not do something of this kind.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 5.17 (tr
Long)
I have
to squirm when I think of all the time I have wasted in wanting the world to
change for me. Why did this have to happen? Why did it all go one way instead
of another? Why can’t this or that person just be better?
The time
would have been far better spent improving myself, which is quite possible,
than trying to determine the world, which is quite impossible.
There
will always be selfish, dishonest, and abusive people, because we are rational
creatures, and rational creatures act from their own judgments. We will always
choose what we think to be best for us, and where there is the possibility of a
good choice, there is also the possibility of a bad choice. I cannot insist on
the freedom of my own actions, while at the same time denying it to others,
however mistaken I may think they are in their decisions.
I should
also not think that Nature somehow made a mistake in allowing this state of
affairs. Everything within the whole will act for the sake of the whole, even
when the order behind this purpose is not immediately apparent to me.
Providence will permit things that may seem wrong to me, but I must remember
that any circumstance, however disturbing, can be an opportunity for good.
This is
especially fitting within the Stoic model of virtue, because what is good
within my life, and how I fulfill my part within the world, will depend only on
what I make of things, not what they make of me.
When I
see another trying to do me harm, I should not despair that all will be lost,
or think that Providence is in error, or even wish that it were not so. I must
remember that everything is as it is for a reason, and this includes how human
freedom is itself a part of Providence.
The
person who tries to do me harm will, of course, really only harm his own
character, while at the same time giving me the means to build my own, by
responding to evil with good. In this way, something wrong is transformed into
something right. Instead of seeing only doom and gloom when my neighbor acts
poorly, I must think how I can turn it around to act well. In so doing, I may
also help the bad man, as well as helping myself.
The way
I choose to think and live and the way another chooses to think and live are
already a part of the way all things are meant to be. There can, I believe, be
a profound sense of gratitude from being given the power to rule myself, and a profound
sense of reverence from knowing that my own power participates fully in a
greater harmony of purpose.
How
foolish to wish it to be different than it should be.
5.18
Nothing
happens to any man that he is not formed by Nature to bear.
The
same things happen to another, and either because he does not see that they
have happened, or because he would show a great spirit, he is firm and remains
unharmed.
It
is a shame, then, that ignorance and conceit should be stronger than wisdom.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 5.18 (tr
Long)
The
Stoic will find contentment in the fact that he comes equipped to provide for
his own happiness, and that he may always make good out of any circumstance.
Could
the things that happen to me take away my property, my pleasure, or my
position? Could the things that happen to me even take away my very life? Yes,
and they most certainly will, to one degree or another, and at one time or
another. Yet none of these things are the measure of my life. Reason informs me
of this, and serenity follows from this.
Now
while the Stoic may give the appearance of strength, not all who give the
appearance of strength are necessarily Stoic. The dignity of action is not
simply in its outward signs, but in its inward disposition. As Marcus Aurelius
points out, some people seem to possess endurance, but they may possess it for
very different reasons.
Sometimes
our ignorance will make us thoughtless, careless, or completely indifferent to
what is happening. We then stumble through life unaffected by things, because
we are unaware of what they actually mean. This is hardly Stoic.
Sometimes
our arrogance will make us think that we are invincible, and that we must be
strong in order to live up to a special image of ourselves. We then smash our
way through life unaffected by things, because we believe we are better than
those things. This, too, is hardly Stoic.
The man
who drinks poison because it tastes sweet is a fool, not a Stoic. The man who
faces danger to impress himself and others is vain, not a Stoic.
It may
seem wrong that ignorance and pride appear more powerful than wisdom and
virtue, but I would suggest that while they may give the impression of power,
they are, of course, completely lacking in any power of character. Perhaps the
irony is that only foolish and vain people would even begin to confuse such
things.
I
remember a time when I won a soccer game by blindly kicking the ball at the
last second. I had no clever plan, no skillful play in mind, and I wasn’t
aiming anywhere at all, yet it went into the corner of the goal. For a short
time after that, my skill and strength were praised.
Dumb
luck isn’t strength.
I
remember another time when I passed an oral exam by appearing confident. I was
well aware that I didn’t know the material as well as I should, but I replied
to every question with a cocky insistence that the question was misleading or
misguided. The examiners fell for it, and for a short time after that, my
knowledge and insight were praised.
Presumption
isn’t strength.
I would
have been a much stronger fellow if I had admitted I didn’t have a clue about
what I had done, or admitted I didn’t have any idea what I was talking about.
5.19
Things themselves do not touch
the soul, not in the least degree, nor do they have any admission to the soul,
nor can they turn or move the soul.
But the soul turns and moves
itself alone, and whatever judgments it may think proper to make, such it makes
for itself the things that present themselves to it.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 5.19 (tr
Long)
In
middle school, I was once surrounded by a bunch of barbarians during lunch. No,
they weren’t wielding axes and maces, or wearing helmets with horns on them,
but they were barbarians just the same.
I was a timid,
weak, and scrawny fellow, so I knew what I had coming to me. I had never read a
bit of Stoicism at that point, though I did have the benefit of the wisdom
given to me by my family. I prepared for the worst.
“You
can’t hurt me,” I cried.
“Yeah?
We’ll beat the shit out of you, you little faggot. Will that hurt?”
This
wasn’t the first time something like this had happened. It had become a regular
occurrence over the years, and in a more refined and professional form, it
became a regular occurrence for many years to come. It still happens today. The
assaults just became verbal instead of physical.
Even
then, I knew that they were wrong in what they did, so I tried to find
something right from what I did.
“You’re
better than me. Prove it.”
They did
indeed prove it, on their own terms.
This is
exactly what life throws at us. Those who do these things probably have no idea
how they are hurting others, and I suspect they don’t even care.
All I
have is to decide what to make of the hurt. There is the key.
I had
spent too much time dwelling on the pain in my circumstances, in my reputation,
in my body, and in my feelings. For myself, however, it was easier to take a
kick in the groin than a kick to my confidence. I could easily bear physical
pain, but I somehow couldn’t handle emotional pain.
Why not
apply the same standard, I thought? Both kinds of suffering come from the
outside, not from the inside. Both kinds of suffering are received from others,
not given by me. Both kinds of suffering are the result of what is thought
about me and done to me, not about what I think and do for myself.
There is
then a brilliant moment of realization. There is indeed something about me that
no one can ever hurt, about who I am, and not what others tell me that I am.
You can’t touch that. It’s mine, and only mine. I will keep a tight hold on it,
not out of arrogance, but from a sense of responsibility. My thoughts and
choices are my own, not yours.
If you
try to harm me, you can certainly take my body, my property, or my reputation.
I might even throw them your way to keep you occupied, like a dog with a bone.
You will never take my soul. The more you push at it, the stronger it gets.
You
can’t hurt me. You are pissing into the wind whenever you try to prove that you
can. You only make yourself worse when you try to please yourself in that way,
because I rule myself without condition. How will you choose to rule yourself?
The old family
wisdom was completely right.
5.20
In
one respect man is the nearest thing to me, so far as I must do good to men and
endure them.
But
so far as some men make themselves obstacles to my proper acts, man becomes to
me one of the things that are indifferent, no less than the sun, or wind, or a
wild beast.
Now
it is true that these may impede my action, but they are no impediments to my
affects and disposition, which have the power of acting conditionally and
changing, for the mind converts and changes every hindrance to its activity
into an aid.
And
so that which is a hindrance is made a furtherance to an act, and that which is
an obstacle on the road helps us on this road.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 5.20 (tr
Long)
Marcus
Aurelius often speaks of man’s social nature, and how creatures endowed with
reason are inherently ordered toward cooperation and mutual respect. It is the
virtue of justice that should rule our relationships with others, giving to
each his due, in the recognition that we all share the same dignity and
purpose.
I am
always saddened to see people treat one another poorly, most especially when
they claim to seek virtue. Yet I must understand that the power to choose
virtue will also include the power to choose vice. How should I go about
dealing with someone who would treat me unfairly, try to do me harm, or tempt
me away from living well?
I must
surely still desire what is good for him, and assist him in whatever way is
possible to find his own happiness. Yet insofar as his words and deeds may
become a hindrance to my own character, I must be completely indifferent to
them. I should treat his actions as neither good nor bad in themselves, but
rather ask myself how whatever he has said or done, however he intended it, can
help me to improve myself.
It is
not what he has done that is good or bad for me, but how I make something of it
that is good or bad for me.
While
another may hinder what is outside of me, he cannot hinder what is inside of me.
Not only can his actions not control my judgment, but I can in turn also transform
his action through my judgment. What was supposed to do harm can be turned into
something of benefit, depending entirely upon what I do with it.
Will you
speak dishonestly? I will confront it, and try to reply honestly. Will you take
what isn’t yours? I will confront it, and try to give of myself. Will you act
with hate? I will confront it, and try to respond with love. This helps me to
become better, and may also help you to make yourself better.
The
stumbling block can become the stepping-stone.
I had a
math teacher many years ago, a nun who was tough as nails but with the biggest
heart. She had a poem by R.L. Sharpe, called “A Bag of Tools”, on her classroom
wall. I think of the poem, and I think of her, very often:
Isn't
it strange how princes and kings,
And
clowns that caper in sawdust rings,
And
common people, like you and me,
Are
builders for eternity?
Each
is given a list of rules;
A
shapeless mass; a bag of tools.
And
each must fashion, ere life is flown,
A
stumbling block, or a stepping-stone.
5.21
Reverence
that which is best in the Universe, and this is that which makes use of all
things and directs all things.
And
in like manner also reverence that which is best in yourself, and this is of
the same kind as that.
For
in yourself also, that which makes use of everything else is this, and your
life is directed by this.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 5.21 (tr
Long)
This was a passage I originally
glossed over, because I foolishly assumed it wasn’t really telling me anything
new. Yes, I thought, Divine Reason directs all things, just as my own reason
directs me. Got it.
But when I returned to it later, and
gave myself time to reflect on both its breadth and depth, I was overcome by a
certain sense of awe and gratitude. I felt wonder at how closely my humanity
participated in Divinity, and I felt profound thanks to be given the chance to do
so.
I have often felt so separated from
the things around me, and from the order that ties all things together. It is a
form of feeling lonely, but also a deeper isolation from existence itself.
There were my thoughts, the thoughts of others that seemed so alien to me, and
the thought of God that seemed so far above and beyond me. Each was in its own
box.
But mind, thinking, awareness, or
consciousness, whatever we wish to call it, is never something that is
separated from things. By its very definition, it reaches out to other things,
grasps them, and, in a sense, comes to contain them within itself. Thought is
always what is “out there” becoming present “in here”, and vice versa.
I realized I could look at this from
two directions, from the top down or from the bottom up. The first appealed
more to my theoretical side, the second more to my practical side.
First, I could begin with the
Universe itself. Nature reveals order and purpose, and order and purpose reveal
design, and design reveals Mind. Each thing plays its role, in its own way, in
a balanced relationship with every other thing, through a process of change, of
action and reaction. I myself am a piece of this process, though in a special
way, because the order of Reason in all things is mirrored in my own order of
reason. I share directly with all of Nature when I discover meaning and
direction within my own particular nature.
Second, I could begin with just
myself. I perceive that I am a being that not only acts, but is also
reflectively aware of his own actions, and by that awareness directs those very
actions. I also cast that awareness to what is outside of me, and I see other
things being acted upon, and other minds, precisely like my own, acting upon
them. I can proceed from what is proximate to what is ultimate, to recognize
how just as all of my parts are ruled through my mind, all things as parts of a
whole are ruled through Mind.
Human mind and Divine Mind exist in
different degrees, but they are all aspects of exactly one and the same thing. The
lower is an emanation, so to speak, of the higher.
From a Christian perspective, for
example, I was always taught that man is made in the “image and likeness” of
God.
When I later learned about Vedanta
Hinduism, I was taught Tat Tvam Asi,
“Thou art That”, how Atman, the
principle of self, is Brahman, the
universal principle.
When I tried to understand Taoism, I
was advised to see myself as a microcosm of the Universe, to discover that the Tao, the way or path, within me flows and
proceeds from the Tao of all things. From
Tao Te Ching 54:
Cultivate
the Tao within oneself; and one's virtue will be perfected.
Cultivate
it within the household, and one's virtue will be abundant.
Cultivate
it within the neighborhood, and one's virtue will be enduring.
Cultivate
it within the nation, and one's virtue will be overflowing.
Cultivate
it within the entire world, and one's virtue will be universal.
I am reminded of all these different
expressions of truth when I read Marcus Aurelius on the unity between my own
ruling principle and the ruling principle of everything. For too long, I always
separated them from one another, and did not recognize their deeper
complementarity.
5.22
That
which does no harm to the state, does no harm to the citizen.
In
the case of every appearance of harm apply this rule: if the state is not
harmed by this, neither am I harmed.
But
if the state is harmed, you must not be angry with him who does harm to the
state. Show him where his error is.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 5.22 (tr
Long)
I was confused, from early on, about
two specific sorts of behavior that have always seemed to be quite socially
acceptable. Age and experience have only made me scratch my head all the more.
First, people will often measure the
good in life like a balance sheet of debits and credits. They will commit
lesser evils, or permit lesser evils, if they perceive a greater profit from them
as a whole. They believe that a smaller wrong is excused by a larger right. The
ends justify the means.
Second, people will often assume it
is appropriate to hurt the people they think have hurt them. It is completely wrong
to do harm, except when harm has already been done, in which case it is a right
to do harm in return. They believe that violence is excused as a response to
violence. Again, the ends justify the means.
This passage helps me to come to
terms with both of these oddities.
First, there can never be any good
for the whole at the expense of the part, and there can never be any good for
the part at the expense of the whole. It all goes together. At no point should
I think that going against Nature supports Nature. It’s a package deal.
Second, there can never be any good
for the first fellow at expense of the second fellow, and there can be never be
any good for the second fellow at the expense of the first fellow. It all goes
together. At no point should I think that going against Nature supports Nature.
It’s a package deal.
These actually turn out to be the
same issue, just with different expressions. Nothing ever gets better by making
it worse.
I can’t say, for example, that I am
doing good for the whole community by doing harm to any of its members, and if
someone does do harm to the community, I should correct and improve him,
instead of hurting him out of vengeance.
Though this has long seemed clear to
me, I regularly deal with people for whom the concept seems completely alien.
I once taught at a school where an important
administrator would speak regularly about firing employees. Out of frustration,
I once simply asked him why he was so keen on the idea of taking away people’s
jobs, and whether there might be better ways to solve problems.
“Well, it’s for the good of the
school. I care about the school. It’s like a family to me.”
“If your son does something to annoy
you, do you kick him out of the family? Is it for the good of the family to
hurt some members and not others?”
“Well, that’s different. I have to
live with my family! Don’t be stupid!”
I realized there was no point
reminding him that we have to live with all of the people around us, not only
the ones we prefer.
I suspect that those who think we
can dispose of a few for the many, of some for others, are trapped in an
attitude of “us” and “them”, of constant conflict, where there really is no
awareness of the good of the whole at all.
How wonderful it is that the Stoic
must never think of his own benefit in opposition to the benefit of others. For
him, these things are one and the same.
5.23
Often
think of the rapidity with which things pass by and disappear, both the things
that are and the things that are produced. For substance is
like a river in a continual flow, and the activities of things are in constant
change, and the causes work in infinite varieties, and there is hardly
anything that stands still.
And
consider this that is near to you, this boundless abyss of the past and of the
future in which all things disappear.
How
then is he not a fool who is puffed up with such things, or plagued about them,
and makes himself miserable? For they vex him only for a time, and a short
time.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 5.23 (tr
Long)
I once grew impatient and frustrated
with this sort of passage, complaining that it all seemed to be about making
myself feel insignificant, and ignoring my happiness. I found myself answering
my own objection, since there was no one else around to listen. Perhaps it is actually
about making my apparent problems seem insignificant, so that I can then pay
proper attention to my happiness.
We say it far more often than we
mean it, or even understand it, but things only make sense from the right
perspective. As circumstances become larger or smaller in my estimation, they
become more or less important in the order of my priorities. It can, therefore,
be of great help to measure with the proper scale. Things that seemed so
overwhelming can suddenly become a trifle, and what I had overlooked can
suddenly become quite relevant.
When I have felt physical pain from
something like a toothache, for example, the expectation that it will pass can
help make it bearable. The suffering may feel intense, but it grows smaller
within the larger context of time.
I can do much the same with the
obnoxious neighbor, the demanding boss, or the thoughtless friend. How
meaningful is this, after all, in the picture of the whole? Knowing it to be
only a tiny bit, however annoying, in the fullness of life, is it worth all the
attention, and thereby making it far more important than it really is?
It can even work with the situations
that seem far more imposing. I remember the moment when I realized it was quite
likely I would suffer from the Black Dog for the rest of my life. I had now
been waking up most every morning for fifteen years, filled with those
crippling feelings, and I was slowly becoming more adept at managing them.
Look, I’ve done this for years now.
What are a few years more? What is any of this really in the big picture? There
is the infinite in every direction, the flow of constant change, and here I am,
fretting about how some little demons in my soul, or chemicals in my head, are
messing around with my mood.
Yes, it hurts. Now look at
everything else that is good, beautiful, and pleasant in this wide world, in
the whole pattern of Providence, whether far away or right outside my window.
It still hurts, but it puts the hurt in context. I will only neglect my own
happiness when I attend more to inferior things, and thereby attend less to
superior things.
Some may think this nonsensical, but
speaking only for myself, I have found there is no better anti-depressant than
putting things into perspective. It isn’t that I’m unimportant, but rather that
the things I worry so much about are really unimportant. Now I can get on with
the business of living for what matters. I can begin to find joy in what I do,
not misery in relying on what may be done to me.
Ah, Casablanca, your script seems to produce more Stoic gems every time
I look:
I'm
no good at being noble, but it doesn't take much to see that the problems of
three little people don't amount to a hill of beans in this crazy world.
Someday you'll understand that.
And that, I suggest, is why Rick can
be completely content with himself at the end of the film, while he was
completely lost at the beginning.
5.24
Think
of the Universal Substance, of which you have a very small portion; and of
universal time, of which a short and indivisible interval has been assigned to
you; and of that which is fixed by destiny, and how small a
part of it you are.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 5.24 (tr
Long)
Again, this isn’t about feeling
insignificant because I’m small, but about finding my significance in what is
big.
I can be both proud and humble when
I understand my part within the whole. I become arrogant or insecure when I
either reject the whole or reject my part. Who I am, and how I matter, will
only make sense to me in the context of how everything works together. If I
lose track of that measure, I will sway between thinking too much or too little
of myself.
Yes, I am only a tiny bit of
something so much bigger, a dab of paint on the canvas, a single thread in the
tapestry. But what a true work of art I am a part of! The position of the self
within the world is the only thing that can give meaning to the self.
When they first tried to teach me
something about art history, I was quite taken with a painting by Piero della
Francesca, The Flagellation of Christ.
Three figures are gathered together in the foreground, seemingly oblivious to
Jesus being scourged in the background. It made me think about what really was
big and small in this life.
Now I have heard all sorts of
theories about the artist’s intentions, about who the three figures were, and
about all sorts of hidden meaning. All I knew was that I was supposed to be
paying attention to a central event in the salvation of mankind, and all I
could look at were these three well-dressed fellows having a casual chat. I
felt a little guilty about this, somewhat selfish, for dwelling on the mundane
over the sacred.
So it is in much of life. I spend so
much of my time concerned with myself and with the things immediately
surrounding me, with all of my everyday worries, and I completely forget to look
at the whole. I make more of what is less, and less of what is more. I develop
a skewed perspective, where the nearness of something to me is confused with
its importance.
If I can begin to step back, and
take in the whole picture, I will learn to think less of myself, while at the
same time discovering everything about myself. I will find my place, and for me
that means I will be home. The great fullness of being, the vast expanse of
time, and the profound workings of Providence are the setting in which my life,
however small and humble, must embrace its purpose.
5.25
Does
another do me wrong? Let him look to it. He has his own disposition, his own
activity.
I
now have what the Universal Nature wills me to have, and I do what my nature
now wills me to do.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 5.25 (tr
Long)
How many of my problems, how much of
my frustration and disappointment, would cease immediately if I only learned to
rule myself, to let others rule themselves, and to let Nature play herself out
as she intends?
This is a game changer. It frees me from
so much of what burdens me, and frees me for so much of what I was made to be. So
what’s stopping me?
When I first read this passage, I
pondered all the possibilities, but it took me a while to wonder why I seemed
afraid of the actualities. Old habits
are hard to break, and the Stoic Turn, in any of its aspects, is hardly just
cosmetic. It is a fundamental change of priorities, and therefore a completely
new way of living.
Responsibility is liberating, but it
can also seem quite frightening. Marcus Aurelius is telling me that what I
think and do is my concern. What the people around me think and do is their
concern. Nature gives us everything we need to do all of these things rightly.
It is liberating, because nothing is hindering me from living well, but it is
frightening, because there are no longer any excuses for living poorly.
I think of how often I have run for
cover, to make my own weakness seem to be the weakness of someone or something
else. They don’t respect you, so it’s all their fault. She lied to you, so it’s
all her fault. I got sick, so it’s all the world’s fault.
Now everyone and everything around
me will indeed act upon me, but the only thing that defines my own happiness or
misery is how I act for myself. There is no getting around the profound power
of that realization.
I will further need to redefine my
very sense of success, of what is really mine and what isn’t, of my social
standing, of what makes someone a friend. In a world where most of us will let
our circumstances determine us, the Stoic may at best seem eccentric, at worst
downright dangerous and insane. These are not easy steps to take.
All the hesitation should surely
disappear when I observe the sense of peace that such thinking will bring. I
can care for others, I can act for their good, and I can give them my respect,
but I do not need to make my own dignity dependent on whether they care for me,
act for my good, or give me any respect.
Let me be accountable for myself,
and as for all the rest, I can learn to simply let it be.
5.26
Let
the part of your soul that leads and governs be undisturbed by the movements in
the flesh, whether of pleasure or of pain. And let it not unite
with them, but let it circumscribe itself and limit those affects to their
parts.
But
when these affects rise up to the mind, by virtue of that other sympathy that
naturally exists in a body that is all one, then you must not strive to resist
the sensation, for it is natural.
But
let not the ruling part of itself add to the sensation the opinion that it is
either good or bad.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 5.26 (tr
Long)
I long ago lost track of how many
times people have told me that Stoicism is cold, heartless, or denies the value
of our feelings. This is sadly what the word has come to mean in daily use, yet
this confuses the man who orders his emotions with the man who denies his
emotions.
It is ironic that the people I know
who genuinely live in a Stoic manner, those who don’t just mouth the fancy words
but embrace the spirit of the task, are some of the most deeply feeling people
I’ve ever met. They will have an intense sense of compassion, even empathy, for
others, and whether they are reserved or outgoing, will be profoundly conscious
of their own feelings and the feelings of others.
What will make them so different
from others, however, is not that they are passionate, but how they always
strive to be the masters of their feelings. They will neither let themselves be
tossed around by their emotions, pulled this way and that, nor suppress or
ignore them. They will accept what they feel, they will seek to understand it,
and then they will use the power of their judgment to put it in its proper
place. They will feel pleasure and pain, though they will not assume that these
impressions are in themselves beneficial or harmful, or have any direct control
over our estimation.
However they may express it, in
Stoic language or in different terms, such people understand that the heart
will feel, while the mind must guide those feelings. They recognize themselves
as beings of both reason and passion, where the latter must be in the service
of the former.
Marcus Aurelius explains that the
problem is never in having emotions at all. It is right and natural to feel,
and sometimes to feel very strongly. As
they say, real men aren’t afraid to cry. The problem is when we judge poorly
about them, and do not allow our understanding to make good use of them. The
passions are not good or bad, but only what I choose to do with them is good or
bad.
In the Phaedrus, Plato uses the allegory of a chariot to describe the
human soul. The charioteer represents the mind, while the horses represent our instincts
and passions. A similar image is employed in the Katha Upanishad:
Know
that the Atman (self) is the driver and the chariot,
and
the body is the chariot.
Know
that the Buddhi (intelligence, ability to reason) is the charioteer,
and
Manas (mind) is the reins.
The
senses are called the horses,
the
objects of the senses are their paths.
Formed
out of the union of the Atman, the senses and the mind,
him
they call the "enjoyer".
Just as the driver can direct the
power of the horses under his control to get to his destination, so the mind
can direct the power of impressions to live well. Just as the driver who cannot
tame his horses will be thrown or dragged about, the mind that cannot tame the
passions will be thrown or dragged about.
I am most certainly a creature of
feeling, and this has its rightful place. I am also a creature of reason, and
this has its rightful place. All is well when the driver leads the horses, but
things will end poorly when the horses lead the driver.
5.27
Live
with the gods.
And
he does live with the gods who constantly shows to them that his own soul is
satisfied with that which is assigned to him, and that it does all that the
daemon wishes, which Zeus has given to every man for his guardian and guide, a
portion of himself.
And
this is every man's understanding and reason.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 5.27 (tr
Long)
The matter of religion, and
religious practices, can get people quite worked up. Perhaps only questions of
politics are more troublesome.
I have found that there is a good
reason for this. Religious faith is about what is ultimate, and at the same
time it is also deeply personal. This can be an explosive mixture. It
furthermore doesn’t help us when appeals to faith are sadly so often
characterized by their hypocrisy instead of their sincerity.
But I can rest assured that Marcus
Aurelius isn’t trying to proselytize or get his hands on my donation, because
he describes the root of piety in a manner that is honest, simple, and
universal.
The pious man is happy to live with
Providence.
The pious man follows the guidance
of his reason, and of his conscience.
In both of these things, he shows
reverence for the Divine, however he may choose to understand it. He recognizes
that he is a part of something greater than himself, and that his own good
participates in the good of all things. He also recognizes that he is given a
great gift, and a great responsibility, in having the power of understanding.
He knows his every action must be in harmony with the benefit of the whole.
The Divine that made him is also
present within him, because he can order his own life through his use of
reason, just as all of Nature is ordered through Divine Reason.
I had the great benefit of being
raised with religion that was never about posturing or manipulation, though I
learned very quickly that many others saw it quite differently. As I grew
older, I would ask myself, “How is this right for me?” There was a certain
moment, however, when I saw that this wasn’t exactly the best way to ask the
question. I should rather simply be asking, “How is this right?”
The difference was not just thinking
of myself, but rather also thinking of myself in relation to all other things.
It was about how I worked in the context of how the world worked. I should be
willing to play my part, and do so with a sense of accountability, knowing that
it was my own reason that could guide the way.
My grandmother would sometime scold
me with the saying, “Use the mind that God gave you!” It would make me grimace
then, but it makes me smile now.
5.28
Are
you angry with him whose armpits stink? Are you angry with him whose mouth
smells foul? What good will this danger do you? He has such a mouth, he has
such armpits. It is necessary that such an emanation must come from such
things.
But
the man has reason, it will be said, and he is able, if he takes pain, to
discover wherein he offends. I wish you well of your discovery. Well then, and
you have reason. By your rational faculty stir up his rational
faculty; show him his error, admonish him. For if he listens, you will cure
him, and there is no need of anger. Neither tragic actor nor
whore. . . .
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 5.28 (tr
Long)
Philosophy can hardly get more gritty
and practical than this.
I will find myself distracted by
negativity and petty criticisms from others, and then I must remind myself to
not let my frustration itself become a form of negativity and petty criticism.
It is easy to condemn and dismiss, difficult to understand and accept.
I am tempted to feel resentment over
the smallest things in others, because I wish to ignore taking responsibility
for myself. By expecting the world to give me the things that I assume are
good, and sparing me from the things that I assume are bad, I will make
dramatic complaints about what I consider indecent on the outside of me, while
being rather indecent on the inside of me.
Do I find something offensive? I
need to remember that nothing offends in and of itself, and I am the one who
chooses to take such offense. It is much like boredom. Things aren’t boring,
but I decide that I am bored by them. Things will be as they are, according to
their own natures, and my like or dislike of them is neither here nor there.
The man whose habits, or appearance,
or odor disturb me has done me no wrong. I am only doing myself wrong by being
angry, or rolling my eyes, or gritting my teeth, or making insulting comments
behind his back.
But perhaps I am convinced he really
does wrong. Doesn’t he know better? Perhaps, instead of showing him disrespect,
I can help him to understand. We both possess the power of reason, and I can
hardly expect him to exercise his reason if I will not exercise mine. As in the
Apology, Socrates reminded the
Athenians that they should educate an ignorant man, not harm him.
I must either accept a man for who
he is, or I must help him to make himself better. Anything else is whining, or just
more vice on my part.
For many years now, attendance at
professional meetings has often been a trial for me. The speaker is usually
talking down to me, and the people around me are usually making fun of the
speaker. I find myself annoyed by it all, and feel that my time is being
wasted. There can be quite a bit of posturing and dismissiveness all around.
Here is a perfect opportunity,
however, to put simple Stoic values to the test, and to make something good of
what I falsely assume is bad. Other people will have their own estimations, and
my frustration is only within my estimation. This helps me to rule myself. If I
am sure that a mistake is being made, then I can act and speak like a social
animal, with respect, solidarity, and reason, not like a hyena, cackling and
skulking about. Whenever I see something I don’t like, there is an opportunity
to order my own thinking, or to assist another in ordering his own thinking.
Our social nature asks us to stand
with people, not against them.
5.29
As
you intend to live when you are gone out, so it is in your
power to live here. But if men do not permit you, then get away out of life,
yet do so as if you were suffering no harm.
The
house is smoky, and I quit it. Why do you think that this is any trouble?
But
so long as nothing of the kind drives me out, I remain, I am free, and no man
shall hinder me from doing what I choose; and I choose to do
what is according to the nature of the rational and social animal.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 5.29 (tr
Long)
Some people speak only about how
much better life will be when it’s over. Others cling to life frantically, as
if survival were the only measure of living. Some can’t wait to die, because
the here and now isn’t good enough for them, while others can’t bear the
thought of dying, because there is nothing except the here and now for them.
The Stoic may look on with some confusion, not sure what all the fuss is about.
There is no need to either run from
life or cling to life. I shouldn’t have to look forward to a better time, since
I can make this a better time. I shouldn’t be afraid to lose this time, since
how well I can live is never determined by how long I can live.
The Stoic will not pray for death,
and he will not fear death. Death is indifferent, a completely natural
occurrence, that is not in itself good or bad; it is only good or bad in what
we make of it. The Stoic can think this way not because he is careless or
heartless, but because he understands that quality takes precedence over
quantity.
I am given some time, however long
or short, and the value of my life will come from my actions, how fully I live
according to wisdom and virtue. More or less time will not change how well or how
poorly I choose to do this. I can be content with this, at any given moment,
and I need not ask for anything else.
Why put it off until tomorrow? I can
do it now, which is all I am sure to have. Am I given another day? Good, then I
will do my best on that day as well. Is it time for it to end? That will also
be fine, as I can be content that my part was well played.
Someone or something can take my
life, can force me out, and then it is time to go. I will only hesitate if I
have cared for all the wrong things. While I am still here, it is completely
within my power to act from good character, and anything that is done to me can
only be a further opportunity to practice it.
I think of all the people I have
known who have died, and those who accepted their deaths without complaint or
regret were almost always the same ones who had lived their lives committed
only to living well. Because they judged themselves by how they loved others
while they lived, they had no reason for feeling loss as they died.
When the house gets too smoky, it’s
time to leave.
5.30
The
Intelligence of the Universe is social. Accordingly, it has made the inferior
things for the sake of the superior, and it has fitted the
superior to one another.
You
see how it has subordinated, coordinated, and assigned to everything its proper
portion, and has brought together into concord with one another the things
which are the best.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 5.30 (tr
Long)
While we Moderns have knowledge of
the natural world that would have amazed the Ancients, the Ancients had
something that we too often neglect. They sought to understand the identity of
things within the context of order and purpose, and therefore as an expression
of harmonious design. We seek out the structure of matter and the laws by which
it moves, while they also sought out the essence of things and their ultimate
ends. Their world was not just a place where “stuff happened”. It was a world
woven from intertwined strands of meaning.
In Aristotelian terms, while we
Moderns, following Francis Bacon, perceive efficient and material causes, the
Ancients also perceived formal and final causes. It isn’t just about matter moving
about, but matter given form, directed toward a goal.
The whole Universe is, in this
sense, social, because each and every thing plays a part within the balance and
relationship of the whole. Things that are less perfect exist for the sake of
things that are more perfect, and things that are more perfect exist for the
sake of one another. A hand or a foot serves a man, and men mutually serve one
another.
I will sometimes feel as if I am in
constant conflict with things in the world, and always struggling with others.
Events and circumstances seem to go against me. The people who should be
friends and neighbors seem more like enemies and competitors. I then remind
myself that this impression comes only from letting my passions blind the
clarity of my thinking. In both the bigger picture and the smaller picture, for
the cosmos as a whole and for the rational and social animals that live within
it, every aspect is balanced with every other.
I lose track of the role I must play
when I feel resentment for the role everything else must play. I get back on
track when I commit myself to my part, and can thereby accept, respect, and
trust in the purpose of the other parts.
When I was a child, I always enjoyed
simply observing different instances of cooperation, things such as the way
water and rocks act upon one another, or the interplay of bees and flowers, or
the harmony of different players in an orchestra. One of my favorite
assignments in elementary school had been making a colorful poster displaying
the overlapping water, carbon, and nitrogen cycles.
Whenever I now observe the things in
life that seem harsh, conflicting, or severe, I turn back to those fond
memories. Something may diminish or cease to be, but wherever there is a
lessening in one part, there is an increase in another, and wherever there is
an ending, there is also a new beginning. Nothing is in vain, since everything
is relational and social.
5.31
How
have you behaved until now to the gods, your parents, brethren, children,
teachers, to those who looked after your infancy, to your friends, kinsfolk,
to your slaves? Consider if you have until now behaved to all in such a way
that this may be said of you:
“Never
has he wronged a man in deed or word.”
And
call to recollection both how many things you have passed through, and how many
things you have been able to endure.
And
that the history of you life is now complete and your service is ended, and how
many beautiful things you have seen, and how many pleasures and pains you have
despised, and how many things called honorable you have spurned, and to how
many ill-minded folks you have shown a kind disposition.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 5.31 (tr
Long)
I see around me all the many different
ways that people consider their lives to be worth living, and this informs me
about whom I should admire as an example, and whom I should be wary of as a temptation.
Many of us look to acquisition, or
reputation, or gratification as if they are worthy ends. Instead, Marcus
Aurelius here asks me to consider the virtue of my actions themselves as a
worthy end, determined by whether or not I have lived with fairness, kindness,
appreciation, and self-control.
How have I treated others around me?
Have I brought them support and comfort, or rejection and insult? When it is
the former, I can be humbly content, but when it is the latter, it is a strong
reminder of what remains for me to do. The task is still incomplete.
How have I faced suffering and
hardship? Have I risen above it, or allowed it to rule me? Have I made myself
better or worse, more caring or uncaring, when things don’t go my way? When it
is the former, I can be humbly content, but when it is the latter, it is a
strong reminder of what remains for me to do. The task is still incomplete.
My life could quite easily cease
right now. Have I been grateful for beauty, or resentful of it? Have I been
indifferent to pleasure and pain, or have I allowed myself to be ruled be them?
Have I pursued only what is right for its own sake, or have I sought only to be
admired for my efforts? The answer to each of these questions will tell me what
is done and what is left undone.
Most telling of all for me, have I
met with abuse, dismissal, or deception from others in kind, or have I
responded with respect, compassion, and integrity? There has been some success
here, but also much failure.
I should be happy with the
successes, but the failures should not have to make me miserable. The failures
will only make me miserable if I do not use them as a means to finally getting
it right. Then even the failures will have served what is good, however
indirectly, whenever I have tried to fix what I have broken, to make something
better of what is worse.
There came a point of awareness for
me, when I could no longer hide away from my mistakes. Feeling ashamed of them,
I had long hoped they might disappear if I only ignored them. Yet when I
honestly asked myself if I had only sought to do right for others, and the
answer was clearly no, I realized I was only compounding the wrong. I needed to
use this as an inspiration, as a way to regain the lost ground, as a means to
make amends whenever I could, and to start all over again whenever I couldn’t.
Marcus Aurelius asks me to face a
soul-searching question. However I may respond to it, I need never be afraid of
the answer. I only need to be afraid of what I do with the answer.
5.32
Why
should unskilled and ignorant souls disturb him who has skill and knowledge?
What soul then has skill and knowledge? That which knows beginning and end, and
knows the Reason that pervades all substance, and through all time by fixed
periods administers the Universe.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 5.32 (tr
Long)
I will often find myself feeling
frustrated and offended when the actions of others are thoughtless and
careless. I will then be tempted to act vindictively or dismissively, but both
of these responses are themselves thoughtless and careless. They both proceed
from a disordered sense of self, an unwillingness to understand myself in right
relation to others and to the world around me.
A man will be unskilled in life not
because he lacks training in some specific trade, but because he neglects the
essential art of acting with character. He will be ignorant in life not because
he lacks any formal education, but because he doesn’t know who he is, where he
came from, and where he is going. If I strive to attain both skill and wisdom,
I should surely know that allowing myself to get upset only weakens my own
power to live well. I must remember that a foolish man acts he as he does from
a lack of understanding, and my anger will help neither him nor me.
As is so often the case, Marcus
Aurelius doesn’t just tell us not to be disturbed, but he offers a very brief
yet thorough account of why this should be so. If I am to live well, this is
only possible if I grasp my own part within the context of the whole. It isn’t
just about me, or about how I feel, or about how I perceive myself to have been
wronged.
Everything that happens is according
to a universal order and purpose, and it is the wise man that can comprehend,
however incompletely, that his own thoughts and actions should be in harmony
with Nature, not in conflict with it. If I can respect that there is a reason
for why things are as they are, I can then seek out the good in all things.
There are no grounds for being
disturbed. There are only grounds for discovering how to freely participate in
a greater good for everything.
When I was first asked to read
Homer’s Iliad, I rolled my eyes, and
was, in a sense, offended that I should have to examine some dusty old text,
one I thought irrelevant to my life, and also so difficult to read. It didn’t
take long for me to change my tune.
I immediately saw that this was a
story with many strands and many themes, but one that stood out for me, time
and time again, was the rage of Achilles. Here was a great man, but a man who
too often acted only for himself, without seeing the big picture, motivated by
vanity instead of wisdom. When he struggles against Agamemnon, when he refuses
to fight, when he reacts to the death of Patroclus, or when he denies pity to
Hector, he is consumed by selfish passion.
I walked away from that first
reading with a profound sense that I always needed to look to origins and ends,
and how what I did played into a greater sense of meaning and purpose. I didn’t
need to be disturbed by pettiness, or lash out at others, if I could only see
beyond myself to the reason that is shared by all.
5.33
Soon,
very soon, you will be ashes, or a skeleton, and either a name or not even a
name. But name is sound and echo. And the things that are much valued in life
are empty and rotten and trifling, and like little dogs biting one another, and
little children quarreling, laughing, and then immediately weeping.
But
fidelity and modesty and justice and truth are fled up to Olympus from the
widespread earth. What then is there which still detains you here? The objects
of sense are easily changed and never stand still, and the organs of perception
are dull and easily receive false impressions, and the poor soul itself is an
exhalation from blood. But to have good repute amidst such a world as this is
an empty thing.
Why
then do you not wait in tranquility for your end, whether it is extinction or
removal to another state?
And
until that time comes, what is sufficient? Why, what else than to venerate the
gods and bless them, and to do good to men, and to practice tolerance and
self-restraint. But as to everything that is beyond the limits of the poor
flesh and breath, to remember that this is neither yours nor in your power.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 5.33 (tr
Long)
Whenever I have asked anyone to read
this passage, they usually make it to the bit about weeping, and, if they have
the patience, to the bit about the world being an empty thing. Then they stop,
shrug, and comment about how they don’t need to be reminded that life is
terrible.
No, I will always say, read to the
good bit!
Many decades ago, a favorite phrase
was “Life sucks, and then you die.” I would impishly reply with “Life only
sucks if you’re worried about dying.”
Like any good Stoic, Marcus Aurelius
draws attention to the things in life that are vain, shallow, and frivolous. He
isn’t trying to get you down. He’s trying to convince you not to worry about
the useless things, only so that you can then find happiness in useful things.
This over here is completely unimportant, so now go and commit yourself to what
is actually important.
I can hardly blame someone for being
depressed when he is told that wealth, honor, and pleasure are a waste of time.
These are, after all, the very things we’ve been told make life worth living.
Make some money, become important, and have some fun, as long as having your fun
doesn’t keep you from making money and seeming important. Don’t get caught. Acquire
these things, and you will be happy. If I am suddenly told that none of these
things are worthwhile, or can give me any contentment, or are even within my
power, I will most certainly think that life, as they say, sucks.
I need to be reminded, each and
every day, that the conventional wisdom about what matters in life is nothing
but conventional ignorance. What kind of fool would believe that the meaning of
life rests entirely in receiving things that are completely outside of us,
depending only on upon what is given, not upon what we give? It’s no wonder we
are so bitter, nasty, and neurotic.
There is another way. I can dispose
of my obsession with what is unreliable, and I can hold to what is reliable. I
can stop being like a snarling dog or a weeping child. I can make the Stoic
Turn, and define my life by what I do, not by what is done to me. I don’t need
to be saddened by the emptiness of my circumstances, but I can rather be
liberated by not caring for my circumstances.
What remains? I can show reverence
to Nature and to Providence, love my neighbor, bear hatred with compassion, and
seek to rule no one but myself. These things are completely reliable, because
only I will determine them. There is no one who can take them from me. That is
why they are the measure of a good life, of a life worth living, of a happy life.
Everything else is an accessory.
Yes, caring about what is empty and
rotten is a waste of my time. I should care about what is truly sufficient,
what is truly my own.
5.34
You
can pass your life in an equable flow of happiness, if you can go by the right
way, and think and act in the right way.
These
two things are common both to the soul of God and to the soul of man, and to the soul of every rational being, not to be hindered by another,
and to hold good to consist in the disposition to justice and
the practice of it, and in this to let your desire find its termination.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 5.34 (tr
Long)
I very much like the phrase, “to let
your desire finds its termination”. Desire is always a want of something, a yearning,
and it is fulfilled and completed when its object has been attained. My hunger
is satisfied when I have eaten, my curiosity is satisfied when I have
understood, or my loneliness is satisfied when I have found a friend.
In the case of my happiness,
however, the object of my desire is not something from outside of me at all, but
proceeds from the very order of my own thoughts and actions. It is not even a
“thing” at all, but a doing, a way of living. Aristotle says, for example, that
happiness is not a feeling or a state, not defined by what happens to me, but
an activity, defined by the way I live.
The very nature of a rational being
is to act through its own judgments, and therefore to live with liberty. The
excellence of a rational being is to employ the liberty that comes from
judgment in the pursuit of what is true and good, and to always act with a
respect for the nature of all other things. A man fulfills his own dignity when
he acknowledges the dignity of his fellows, and treats them with justice.
That which completes us, makes us
whole, and brings with it serenity and joy in this life is not given to us from
without, but flows from within. My own choices are mine alone, and cannot be
taken from me. My deeds will only be as noble or base as my thoughts are noble
or base.
Happiness will often seem so elusive,
something just out of reach. I will only think this, however, if I falsely
assume it is something that is acquired through my circumstances. I might think
I am happy or sad, content or despondent, depending upon whether I have
achieved a certain set of goals out there in the world. Did I get a good job?
Do I live in a nice house? Did I marry the right girl? Do my friends respect
me? Such things may be preferable to us, but they do not constitute happiness.
My happiness follows only from how well I live, with wisdom and with virtue,
whatever circumstances may come my way.
I knew many people in college who
had a complex plan of life all mapped out, and they were certain that they
would be successes or failures by how many of these worldly goals they achieved.
These hoops jumped for the best promotions, these contacts made to get ahead, a
marriage that supports the best career, strategically placed children, and a
home in the best school district to start the cycle all over again.
It was saddening to see so many
people defining themselves by what they hoped would come to them, what would somehow
happen to them, instead of quite simply saying: “My map of life is to live as a
good man, regardless of my conditions.”
Happiness finds its rest, the
termination of its desires, through nothing more than my simple choice to live
with virtue. Anything that is of benefit to a man proceeds from this.
5.35
If
this is neither my own badness, nor an effect of my own badness, and the common
good is not injured, why am I troubled about it? And what is the harm to the
common good?
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 5.35 (tr
Long)
The responsibility for ruling my own
character is already quite sufficient for a life that is well lived, and
therefore happy. Why must I multiply my worries any further by seeking to be
the master of things beyond my power to determine? Why must I confuse
conscience with preference?
If I am to take an inventory of all
of my frustrations, I discover that most of them follow from trying to take
control of things that neither are, nor should be, under my control. I stray
from the good life whenever I fret over anything that is beyond my own moral
choice to act according to the good of Nature, or whenever I insist that
anything I have an inclination for is actually a moral necessity.
My habits of being a busybody, of
seeking to arrange all the pieces of my world as I see fit, is the source of so
much of my anxiety. If it isn’t about what is right or wrong in my own thoughts
and actions, and if it isn’t about how my thoughts and actions conform to the
goods of others, then it isn’t any of my business.
This isn’t about not caring. A
caring man does not need to be a pushy, bossy, or opinionated man. I should
pursue what I know to be right, though never be obsessed with changing things I
cannot change. Many years of working with addicts always brings me back to the “Serenity
Prayer”:
God
grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change,
Courage
to change the things I can,
and
the Wisdom to know the difference
A more comical, though equally
helpful, way to keep myself from overreaching my bounds, and thereby avoid
becoming a quivering mass of tension, is simply to listen to Monty Python’s
“I’m So Worried”:
I'm
so worried about what's happenin' today, you know.
And
I'm worried about the baggage retrieval system they've got at Heathrow.
I'm
so worried about my hair falling out and the state of the world today.
And
I'm so worried about bein' so full of doubt about everything, anyway.
I can then laugh at myself, remember
to do what good I can, and let the rest be as it will be. Being troubled by
everything only makes me the source of my own grief.
5.36.1
Do
not be carried along inconsiderately by the appearance of things, but give help
to all according to your ability and their fitness.
And
if they should have sustained loss in matters that are indifferent, do not
imagine this to be a damage. For it is a bad habit. But as the old man, when he
went away, asked back for his foster-child's toy top, remembering that it was
just a top, so do you in this case also. . . .
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 5.36 (tr
Long)
The seriousness of my care for
something will rise or fall with how important I truly think it to be in the
order of things. A man who places money first in his priorities will commit all
his attention to acquiring and preserving his wealth. A man who places his
character first in his priorities will commit all his attention to acquiring
and preserving his virtue. He will have very little concern about whether he is
rich or poor, but he will have great concern about whether he is good or bad.
When he sees the seeker of truth,
the seeker of riches will be quite confused. Why, he asks himself, is this fool
strolling past all these wonderful opportunities to possess more? Why would he treat
money as such an insignificant thing? So the genuine philosophers, and the
Stoic philosophers especially, appear to the world as men gone insane.
Life will throw all sorts of
impressions my way, offering many appearances of worth. I must learn to judge
these things critically, and to recognize that an appearance is only what
something seems like for the moment. I must look behind it, around it, and
acquire the right perspective. There is nothing inherently good or bad about
how anything looks to me, so I must not allow myself to be carried away by any
impression. I must tame it. The way it looks will only become as good or bad
for me as I relate it to my priorities, principles and values.
My simple version of this, for those
times sudden times I need a quick Stoic jolt, is to say that nothing is ever as
bad, or as good, as it looks.
When the world tells me that the
appearance of money is good, I don’t need to respond with a craving to possess.
When the world tells me that the appearance of popularity is good, I don’t need
to respond with a fear of rejection. When the world tells me that pleasure is
good, and pain is bad, I don’t need to run toward one and away from the other.
If it is most important in my
estimation to be a good man, charged with an informed conscience, I will always
treat my neighbor with justice, as much as I am able and as much as it assists
him. No outside appearance needs to get in the way of this, because nothing, to
me, is greater in measure than true thought and right action.
I can then also look out at the
gains and losses of this world, and I will be able to not worry over them. They
are indifferent things, and so I will take them or leave them by a very
different standard, only by how they can help both others and myself become
wiser and better. If they don’t help us with that, they have no worth for me.
I have never been able to find a
complete explanation of the example Marcus Aurelius gives, but it is apparently
a reference to a comic play of his time, now lost to us. Though I can’t speak
for any content in the story, the context should make it clear that this isn’t
about a mean old man nastily stealing away a poor child’s toy. He asks for the
toy top to be returned, precisely because he knows that in itself it is only a
toy, a trifling thing that has little value. The value will only be in what I
give it, and how much I choose to let it mean to me.
I am learning to care less about
what so many others care more for, and I am willing to gladly let such people
have all of their appearances of reward. These appearances are just disposable
playthings.
5.36.2
.
. . When you are calling out on the Rostra, have you forgotten, man, what these
things are?
“Yes,
but they are objects of great concern to these people!”
Will
you too then be made a fool for these things?
“I
was once a fortunate man, but I lost it, I know not how.”
But
being fortunate means that a man has assigned to himself a good
fortune, and a good fortune is good disposition of the soul, good emotions,
good actions.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 5.36 (tr
Long)
I used to be quite impressed, and
often intimidated, by the confident rhetoric of important folks. They sounded
so wise, and seemed so much better than me. I was certain I could never reach
such a height of excellence.
Hard experience slowly taught me two
things about such people, and why I was so easily misled. First, they don’t
know as much as they’d like you to think. Second, their concern is with the
appearance of character, not with the content of character.
This was a burden for me at school,
and it remained a burden at work. It was something present in all aspects of
social life as well. I began to realize, however, that I would run into two
very different types of people in this world, those who were committed to the
task of living well, and those who were committed to giving others the
impression that they were living well.
The first sort of person doesn’t
much care about his image, and that makes him worthy of actual respect. The
second sort of person only wishes to be seen in a certain way, whether he is
actually worthy of it or not.
One is a characterized by humility
and integrity, the other by pride and deception. One will help you because it
is right, the other will manipulate you because it is convenient.
When I first read Plato, I saw that the
sophists have always been with us. They may be able to speak with great
eloquence, and put on fine airs, but it’s all style with no substance. Even as their
reasoning is fallacious, their words will tickle the passions. In many cases,
the sophists use their skill as a means to acquire great power and influence.
There are demagogues, both big and little, who are like pied pipers in the
political, religious, and professional realms.
The lure of fame is quite tempting,
and its acquisition is rather intoxicating. The remedy lies, as Marcus Aurelius
says, in rethinking what truly makes our lives worthy and fortunate.
If I employ sweet words and empty
promises to lead people by the nose, I am defining my worth by the approval and
praise I hope to receive. It is all an illusion, of course, and in one sense
the master has become a slave to his mob.
If, however, I am defining my worth
by how I build my own wisdom and virtue, I have made myself fortunate from
within, with no need to be approved and praised from without. I won’t need to
pander, to play games, or to appear like something I am not.
6.1
The
substance of the Universe is obedient and compliant. And the Reason that
governs it has in itself no cause for doing evil, for it has no malice, nor
does it do evil to anything, nor is anything harmed by it. But all things are
made and perfected according to this Reason.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.1 (tr
Long)
Whenever we face suffering, we are
inclined to think that the world is somehow unfair, broken, or simply messed
up. We might speculate that God has made some terrible mistake, or that he
takes pleasure in our pain. This may, in turn, lead us to reject the very idea
of meaning, purpose, and order in life.
To say, however, that the world has
gone bad rests on a certain understanding of good and evil, that some
circumstances are beneficial for us, while others are harmful for us. Stoicism
suggests a different measure. Things are as they are for a reason, even as we
do not always fathom the specifics of the reason. They are, in turn, good or
bad for us only insofar as we succeed or fail in making use of them to nurture
our own virtue.
If benefit and harm for us are not
in what happens, but in what we do with what happens, the world has hardly gone
bad. We have rather chosen to take the world badly.
I should not determine my life by
what I passively receive, but in what I actively do. There is something deeply
liberating, though perhaps also frightening, about recognizing that only I am
responsible for what is good or bad in my life, because the value of my life is
in my own thoughts and deeds.
With all effects admitting of
causes, all causality admitting of order, and all order admitting of design, I
can rest assured that everything that is given, however it may at first appear,
is an opportunity granted by Providence. That I, and every other rational
being, can choose well or choose poorly is also a part of that Providence.
Divine Reason, however I may
understand it or speak of it, does not admit of imperfection, because it is
itself the source of all expressions of existence, of all modifications of
substance, that from which all change proceeds, and that to which all change
returns. Ignorance, or indifference, or error, or injustice, or malice, all of
which are incomplete, have no place in what is perfectly complete.
I think of how often I have blamed
others, or blamed the world, or blamed God for something having gone wrong. I
need to rid myself, however, even of the very concept of things going wrong at all. Only I am
accountable for what is right or wrong in my life, for that which is within my
power.
“She doesn’t love me, so life is
unfair.” “It didn’t go my way, so the world is crooked.” I have suffered great
pain, so God must hate me.” None of these statements are true for me, because I
am falsely presuming that what I receive, my preference, and my pleasure or
pain are in any way a standard of good.
Everything that Nature provides,
through presence or absence, can be used well.
6.2
Let
it make no difference to you whether you are cold or warm, if you are doing your
duty.
And
whether you are drowsy or satisfied with sleep. And whether ill-spoken of or
praised. And whether dying or doing something else.
For
it is one of the acts of life, this act by which we die. It is sufficient then
in this act also to do well what we have in hand.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.2 (tr
Long)
I often think that our sense of what
we consider admirable in others is quite disordered. We praise those who seek
first and foremost to rule their circumstances, and we say that they are
strong, determined, or brave. At the same time, we have little respect for
those who seek first and foremost to rule only themselves, and we say that they
are weak, insecure, or timid.
Yet those in the first group are
making their lives rise or fall with what is outside of them, and through what
is ultimately beyond their power, while those in the second group concentrate
on what is within them, and what is rightly under their power. We venerate
those who don’t mind their own business of living well, and we dismiss those
who do.
By all means, give me worldly
achievements and success, but I am a fool if I think these are in any way mine
at all, and I am mistaken if I think I am stronger by being enslaved to my
circumstances. It is also not necessarily any easier to live life with more
external trappings than it is to live with fewer, as anyone who has suffered
deeply in prosperity can tell you.
The critical point in life, where
the rubber meets the road, is whether or not I will act with conscience and
conviction, whatever may happen to come along. I shouldn’t strive to live with
more and more, but I should strive to live better and better. Getting more conveniences
is a passive reliance, while doing more out of duty is an active commitment.
Being just, kind, or honest doesn’t
depend on whether I am warm or cold, rested or tired, esteemed or despised. It
doesn’t even depend on whether I am busy living or dying, because the man who
lives well will also die well.
I used to roll my eyes when I heard
that famous phrase from Lakota Chief Low Dog, “This is a good day to die.” I
now appreciate it much more, because I have seen extremes of plenty and of
want, of pleasure and of pain, of success and of disappointment, and I
recognize that neither one is any better than the other. So too, neither living
nor dying are any better. I must only do right with what I have in hand.
6.3
Look
within things. Let neither the peculiar quality of anything nor its value
escape you.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6,3 (tr
Long)
I am still far too ready to see
things only for me, and not in themselves. I look at the appearance on the
outside, and consider only what is useful or pleasing to me. I neglect to look
at the essence on the inside, at the inherent dignity and purpose of things.
If a Stoic life must be one in
accord with Nature, I should not confuse a subjective impression with an
objective reality. The identity of anything, and its distinct place in the
harmony of all things, remains the same, whether I find it desirable or
repugnant, a convenience or a burden. A respect for my own end requires an
equal respect for the ends of everyone and everything else around me, existing
for their own sake, not merely for my sake.
I can only understand this when I
look within. An object in the natural world isn’t just a resource for me, and a
person in the social world isn’t just a tool for my profit. Look beyond what it
seems, to what it is.
I have often failed to see things
for what they truly are, or people for who they truly are. Swept away by my
impressions alone, I have used and then abused, acquired and then discarded,
wanted at one moment and become indifferent the next. I have filled the world
with my waste, and made waste of the people who should fill my world.
It was only through finding myself
at the receiving end of much the same thoughtlessness that I could even start
to improve myself. Nothing in Nature is ever useless, and no man is ever
disposable. This becomes quite clear when one finds himself to be considered
useless or disposable.
I have long experienced others only
giving me a value based upon how much of an advantage I could be for their own status
or gratification. This would often fill me with resentment or despair, but then
I began to recognize that my own response was equally based on mere appearance
and passion. I can hardly expect others to respect me if I cannot respect them.
The man who can look within, down to
the causes, principles and elements, will never reject, ignore, or discard
anyone or anything. He will always seek to understand how and why it is the way
it is. He will therefore seek to assist Nature on her way, and to love his
neighbor as himself.
6.4
All
existing things soon change, and they will either be reduced to vapor, if
indeed all substance is one, or they will be dispersed.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.4 (tr
Long)
There are some things I may want to be
different, and there are some things I may want to stay the same. A sign of
wisdom is being able to gladly accept that everything will change, whether I wish
it to or not, and the only thing that remains reliable as circumstances shift
around me is my own commitment to what is within my power, for whatever time I
am here.
As I have grown older, my experience
of the passage of time has shifted dramatically. Many of us will recall how
time seemed to move more slowly when we were younger, precisely because there
was less of it to consider, and so everything seemed far more stable. Yet from
the broader perspective of age, what once appeared quite large and unassailable
now appears quite small and fragile.
This can be of great assistance for
me, since I can learn to care less for the passing qualities of life, both the
ones I craved and the ones I despised. A pretty face means far less when I
learn that looks come and go. A painful wound seems less of a burden when
compared to all the other pains, as well as the many joys. Throughout all of
this, my character is still mine.
Yet the passage of time can also be
a hindrance for me, when I cling to something long gone, and I find it
desirable only because it is long gone. Age can also bring with it an unhealthy
nostalgia. Again, however, an honest appeal to experience can set this right. I
shouldn’t be fooled by an impression of something that is more imagined than
real, and I shouldn’t cherry-pick what is pleasant over what is unpleasant.
Having seen more of change can indeed provide that fuller perspective.
Whatever the case, seeing things
come and go, in greater scope and more rapid succession, should not be about mourning
a loss or celebrating a gain. The coming and the going, after all, will happen on
its own. The consistency of my own judgment is what can provide continuity to
it all, and this requires that I never measure myself by what has been done to
me, but by what I am doing right here and now.
I am already forgetting more than I
remember, but the other day I had a very vivid realization that most everything
I did when I was young, both the achievements and the failures, has left behind
virtually no evidence at all. My own memory remains, sometimes blurred,
diminished, magnified or contorted over the years, but that too will soon be
gone.
Now this might have terrified me at
another time, but I actually found the insight to be quite a relief, not
because of what was left behind, but because of what remained. It offered me an
opportunity to value what did matter, in others, in myself, and for all of
Nature when both others and myself have moved along.
6.5
The
Reason that governs knows what its own disposition is, and what it does, and on
what material it works.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.5 (tr
Long)
I will sometimes be quite wary of
trusting the judgments of others, because I have seen how often those judgments
can be twisted by greed and deception. I am even more likely to be wary of trusting
my own judgments, because I have seen how often I have stumbled and fallen.
Once bitten, twice shy.
Sadly, I then apply my reservations
to the Universe itself, and to the Divine Reason that gives it order and
purpose. I perceive that the judgments of other rational creatures, including
my own judgments, admit of limits, and can therefore be subject to error. So I
then falsely assume that all judgment
is limited, and can admit of error.
The crucial difference, however, is
that one form of mind is indeed imperfect, while the other is perfect. One is
only a particular aspect of being, while the other includes within itself the
completeness of all being. For the Stoic, one is a lesser emanation of another
that is greater, a specific part within an all-inclusive whole.
I recognize it as a quirk of only my
own thinking and writing, but this is why I distinguish between nature and
Nature, mind and Mind, reason and Reason.
I should indeed question my own
estimation, and the estimation of others. This does not mean I should ever be
dismissive, but I should certainly be critical. To be critical of the Reason
that rules over all things, however, I need only be critical of my own apprehension
of its workings, not that there is a true meaning and purpose to those
workings. It is innately lacking in nothing, because it is itself the fullness
of everything.
From my own earlier philosophical background,
I recall a concept from Fulton Sheen’s God
and Intelligence in Modern Philosophy, a book that changed my own thinking
in so many ways:
The
Divine Intellect is a measure, not a thing measured.
The
human intellect is a thing measured, not a measure.
On a more personal level, I also
often think of a wonderful line by Cardinal Newman, from his prayer “The
Mission of My Life”:
He
knows what He is about.
Life is certainly full of things
that are fallible. I include my own power to choose and act well within that
category. But if I always seek to conform my own judgment to the order of
Nature, to the design of Providence, and to the workings of Reason, I am
approaching, however humbly and fitfully, a completely trustworthy standard. I
am working to be in harmony with the whole, in the words of the Chandogya Upanishad, with “the one without a second”.
6.6
The
best way of avenging yourself is not to become like the wrongdoer.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.6 (tr
Long)
There are many Stoic thoughts and
expressions that stick to me like glue, day in and day out, but this one is
consistently the most helpful whenever I feel anger.
I have felt hurt, and my base inclination
is to repay it in kind. It boils and bubbles under the surface. I become so
caught up in my emotional turmoil that I completely lose sight of what is good
and evil. Receiving pain, I then assume, requires causing pain, compounded with
interest, and fueled by nothing but vengeance.
And all of this occurs only because
I have falsely judged that gratification takes precedence over decency.
I am certain that Providence permits
me to bear what is bad, only so that I may learn to live by what is good. After
all, if something is harmful, I should not cast myself further into it. I
should turn the other way.
A few years back, I received an odd
message from a fellow I’d known while I was working in social services. He
attached a lengthy series of e-mails, and explained in great detail how I should
slyly forward this information to destroy the career of someone who had done me
great harm in the past. He said he was doing me a favor.
The man was certainly clever, but
hardly acting from good will. He put two and two together, and saw a means for
promoting himself, without directly involving himself. A check on my part
revealed that he was now working for the same state agency that his intended
victim worked for. There was obviously much more to the story.
Yet, for a very brief moment, I felt
that temptation of power over others. I pondered the sick satisfaction that
would certainly come from causing intense suffering, years after I had suffered
intensely. I actually considered agreeing to his plan.
I have done some terrible things in
my life, and I have entertained twisted temptations. This was, I suddenly
realized, the worst of the bunch, and if I allowed myself to succumb to the
offer, I would then be a monster who passes all understanding. I would become
everything I hated. How could there be any turning back after that?
That smoking gun is surely still out
there. Reading those e-mails all the way through made me feel quite sick.
Nothing could have been worse, however, than my meeting greed with more greed,
hatred with more hatred.
My Uncle Alois would always say,
“They already have their reward!” Indeed they do, though it is a self-imposed
punishment, and not a reward at all. Another may choose to destroy himself with
anger and selfishness, but I can be better. Nature gives me that very chance,
every time I feel slighted.
Love is the only answer in the face
of hatred.
6.7
Take
pleasure in one thing and rest in it, in passing from one social act to another
social act, thinking of God.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.7 (tr
Long)
The goals I set for myself in this
life will reveal most everything about who I truly am. Where there is merely a
disjointed catalog of achievements, subject to change as the circumstances move
around, there is only confusion and a want of gratification. Where there is
constancy, am unwavering attention to what is pure and simple, there is a
sincere commitment to character.
I should be rightly concerned when
my life begins to take on the appearance of a shopping list. Attend fancy
school. Get good grades. Acquire prestigious job. Build financial security. Hold
auditions for compatible sexual partner. Develop social network. Adjust mix of
priorities as conditions demand.
I should be equally concerned when
my sense of what is important essentially shifts with what is popular and
fashionable at the moment. I have noticed how certain phrases become
temptations for a slide into relativism. It all needs to be modern, relevant,
cutting-edge, up-to-date, a blueprint for the next generation.
Now by all means, I may prefer this
sort of lifestyle to that, and I may wish to apply what is true and good to the
particular mood of the moment. Yet once I lose sight of one guiding principle, universal
and subject to no terms or conditions, I have strayed from the path.
Happiness in this life is measured
only by the depth of my virtue, treating everyone I encounter with justice and
respect, in constant harmony with the order of Providence.
The rest will come and go, rise and
fall, but there is the root of contentment. One. Simple. Unchanging. There I
can find joy, because joy proceeds from what is complete, lacking in nothing.
Simply as a reflective exercise, but
also curious about the results, I once asked a group of graduating college
seniors to informally jot down their life goals, their priorities for the
future. Most began scribbling furiously, some moving on to a second page quite
quickly. They were also quite keen to share their many hopes and dreams with
others. There were exciting careers, trips to exotic places, complex plans, and
eccentric bucket lists.
Eventually one student, precisely
the one I suspected would do so, made a wry comment. “Don’t any of you care
about being a decent human being?” A silence fell over the room, and then
almost every person wrote down another phrase. When I looked the notes over
later, most had “be a good person” crammed into the margins, or listed
somewhere after skydiving and seeing a favorite sports team win a title.
I may want to become a rocket
scientist, but it takes no rocket science to follow a moral compass in all
things.
6.8
The
ruling principle is that which rouses and turns itself, and while it makes
itself such as it is and such as it wills to be, it also makes everything which
happens appear to itself to be such as it wills.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.8 (tr
Long)
My thinking and my willing do not
change the inherent nature of what is real around me. That is the error of the
subjectivist and the solipsist. But my thinking and willing do change how I
understand the value of what is around me, and they allow me to actively
improve myself, by learning how to make right and proper use of what is around
me.
There might, as they say in the old
Westerns, be gold in them there hills. It will be there, whether I choose to
dig it from the ground or not. A fool ignores the benefit right before him,
while the wise man mines every circumstance and every opportunity that come his
way. He changes himself by changing how he views his world. He may not become
rich by lining his wallet, but he may well become rich by nurturing his very
soul. He will decide to become a better man, whatever may happen to present
itself.
Some people will try to extract
fortune, fame, and pleasure from their conditions. They have decided upon this,
because their actions reflect their own estimation of good and evil. Other
people will try to extract integrity, character, and compassion from their
conditions, because their actions likewise reflect their own estimation of good
and evil.
Can’t a man have both? Perhaps, but
he can’t serve both equally. One bows to the other. What is indifferent defers
to what is necessary.
What will I choose to care about
first and foremost? That will be who I am, and it will be all that matters. It
will become what I will, not by my having made it as it is, but by my having
discovered within it whatever I seek to find.
“I’m going to get what I want!”
Good. Now what do I want? Is that truly worthwhile? Am I content to be
important, but yet a scoundrel? Or might I be happy to be no one of importance
at all, even as I am charged with justice?
I tell myself every day, sometimes
every hour: I need to take my pick, and be happy with the consequences.
I appreciate how Marcus Aurelius
reminds me that my mind must rouse itself and turn itself. I know the path to
take when I see that a life ordered by what is external is a life of allowing
myself to be ruled. I become sleepy, and I am being turned. A life ordered by what
is internal, however, is a life of ruling myself. I am awake, and I am the one who
does the turning.
One man’s riches are another man’s
folly.
6.9
In
conformity to the Nature of the Universe every single thing is accomplished,
for certainly it is not in conformity to any other nature that each thing is
accomplished, either a nature which externally comprehends this, or a nature
which is comprehended within this nature, or a nature external and independent
of this.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.9 (tr
Long)
We are drawn to dividing things.
This is mine, and that is yours. I am right, so you must be wrong. We are
better, and you are all worse.
This is a symptom of the deepest dissatisfaction.
It is a moral sickness.
Our love of separation even rises up
to the lofty realm of metaphysics. I don’t like this world, so there is surely
some other, much better, world. Matter is evil, so there must be a more perfect
form of spirit. People disturb me, so I will create for myself the idea of a God
who promises to remove what is inconvenient to me. My “-ism” is superior to
your “-ism”.
Even as hatred fractures, love will
always unite.
No decent human being will ever alienate
himself from another. So too, nothing in Nature is alien to anything else. It
is all one.
There is nothing “out there” that
comprehends what is real. There is no one part within the whole that rules the
whole. There is nothing external that manages what is internal. There is only
what is real, all things joined together, the less perfect ordered toward what
is more perfect. One reality, not many realities. There is what is, and
anything else is not.
I have struggled to suggest to some
that there is indeed a guiding purpose and principle to it all. I have also
struggled to suggest to others that this guiding purpose and principle is never
something separate, distant, or obscure. I find myself very rarely making any
impression on either end. No matter. I am learning to understand, and I wish it
for others as well.
One of those most powerful and
influential moments of my life was the opportunity to discover a passage from
St. Augustine’s Confessions. While
all the business, pre-law, and pre-med majors found it clever and amusing, I
found it transforming:
And
I viewed the other things below You, and perceived that they neither altogether
are, nor altogether are they not. They are, indeed, because they are from You.
But they are not, because they are not what You are. For that truly is which
remains immutably.
Is Divine Reason transcendent or
immanent? Yes.
6.10
The
Universe is either a confusion, and a mutual involution of things, and a
dispersion; or it is unity and order and Providence.
If
then it is the former, why do I desire to tarry in a fortuitous combination of
things and such a disorder? And why do I care about anything else than how I
shall at last become earth? And why am I disturbed, for the dispersion of my
elements will happen whatever I do.
But
if the other supposition is true, I venerate, and I am firm, and I trust in him
who governs.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.10 (tr
Long)
The intellectual fashion of the age
is to assume that the Universe is random, unaware, and without any inherent
purpose. It all happened for no reason, I have often been told, and now it is
falling apart. The very meaning of science becomes that there is no objective
meaning.
Another model, not in vogue at the
moment, suggests it is hardly reasonable to claim that effects can proceed
without causes, or that something can come from nothing, or that action is not
directed toward an end. Rather, everything is filled with purpose, given order
and direction by Providence.
Marcus Aurelius argues, however,
that either view should lead us, though for very different reasons, not to
worry about the events of our lives, the duration of our lives, or the end of
our lives.
If life is nothing but a chaotic
expulsion, followed by a gradual decay, then there is little cause for clinging
to such an existence. Let it play itself out, perhaps even the quicker the
better, and be done with it. Lacking any directed goal, serving no innate
function, I may numb myself with gratification, but there will be no ultimate fulfillment.
Why worry about it all ending?
If life, however, follows a design, where
change is a constant unfolding, and every ending is also a new beginning, there
is also little cause for clinging to such an existence. This is not because
there is a lack of meaning, but precisely because there is such an abundance of
meaning. Whatever may happen, whenever I may come and go, is as it should be.
Why worry about it all ending?
Yet whichever camp we may find
ourselves in, we still fret, and gnash our teeth, and struggle to hold on. Is
that really necessary, whether nothing can make sense, or everything can make
sense? I will either muddle my way through the disorder, or I will develop the
deepest trust in the presence of order. This or that circumstance, or more or
less of living, will make no difference either way.
I may reject Providence, or I may
embrace it. The choice will be an expression of my freedom, and it will
determine everything else about my own awareness of what is true and good. Even
so, neither path requires me to fear death, or to merely survive at any cost.
6.11
When
you have been compelled by circumstances to be disturbed in a manner, quickly
return to yourself and do not continue out of tune longer than the compulsion
lasts; for you will have more mastery over the harmony by continually recurring
to it.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.11 (tr
Long)
I have often felt like I am being
swept away by an emotion, or that I am being driven by it. Note, however, that
I speak in the passive voice, as if this is only a question of my being acted
upon. I forget that my passions do not need to rule me, and that they should
rightly be ordered and given meaning by my judgments.
I will not be swept anywhere if I am
firmly planted, and I will not be driven if I’m the one who is driving.
Feelings are important, and
powerful, aspects of my humanity, and I am well advised not to ignore them,
repress them, or think them unimportant. I am also well advised not to let them
run away from me.
Any impression, from outside of me
or inside of me, can tell me something valuable, if I only try to understand
where it is coming from and what it represents. But in itself it is not good or
bad, right or wrong. My estimation, my power to comprehend and decide, is what
will provide it with meaning, and allow me to find purpose. A feeling will only
have as much mastery over me as I am willing to give it.
Whenever I feel as if a passion is about
to take control, I can certainly respect its force, while also remembering that
I am bigger than it is. I am in charge. Whenever I have already allowed a
passion to take control, there is no need to give up. I can return back as
swiftly as possible to handling the reins.
The more often I can remember to do
this, the better I will become, because both virtue and vice are formed through
helpful or harmful habits. A man learns to rule himself through practice, just
as a man learns to surrender himself through practice. There is no shame at all
in having a feeling, only in judging and acting poorly about it. Even when I do
fail in my response, it can still help me to move on to success.
My own temperament has always been
markedly melancholic, and many years of bad thinking habits only magnified
this. If I felt sadness, I would compound it by choosing to succumb to despair,
and I would falsely assume that because I felt something very strongly, there
was nothing else I could do.
Yet even as an emotion can be so
intimidating, there is always something I can choose to do with it. Sometimes
the feeling may pass, and sometimes it may stay right there, but its force can
always be redirected. I can become stronger in this through exercise. I can thereby
transform a feeling from being an appearance of conflict to being a tool for
acting in harmony.
I will, after all, only learn to
play an instrument well if I can keep it in tune.
6.12
If
you had a stepmother and a mother at the same time, you would be dutiful to
your stepmother, but still you would constantly return to your mother.
Let
the court and philosophy now be to you stepmother and mother. Return to
philosophy frequently and repose in her, through whom what you meet with in the
court appears to you tolerable, and you appear tolerable in the court.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.12 (tr
Long)
We may think that the court is a
thing of the past, where kings and queens paraded about, their retinue jostled
for favors, and shifty ministers of state arranged their intrigues. Add some
saucy dalliances on the side, and we have all the makings of a gripping
historical novel.
The names and faces may be
different, but all of this is still thriving. We have just described the
workings of most any modern professional institution. I have seen court being
held anywhere, from corporate boardrooms and government offices to universities
and monasteries. Even the old local pub I once frequented worked precisely
along these lines.
We may also think that philosophy is
a thing of the past, suitable perhaps for men in togas or poufy wigs who had
the leisure to ponder the meaning of life, all the time gazing dramatically
into the distance, nodding their heads, and stroking their chins. Our modern
world, it would seem, is too busy getting important things done to be so
useless.
Remove the silly trappings, however,
and man is still as philosophical a creature as he ever was. Few of us may
still attempt to write ponderous books of wisdom with impressive titles, but
all of us, on each and every day, will go about making judgments of what is
true and false, good and bad. That is still an essentially philosophical exercise,
however well or poorly we may go about doing it.
In other words, every man attends
court, because every man lives in the world, engages in business, and
participates in society. Ever man is also a philosopher, in the most immediate
and practical sense, because he thinks about the meaning, value, and purpose of
how he will go about living in the world.
Now which of these two things needs
to come first, just keeping ourselves busy, or understanding what it is worth
being busy with? The work of the day, my obligation to the court, is the
stepmother. I must be committed to her, and attend to her with care and
concern. But my sense of the true and the good, my obligation to philosophy, is
the mother. She is the very measure that informs what is worthy within the work
of the day.
Respect your stepmother, but respect
your mother all the more. Only philosophy can teach me to endure the workings
of the court, and only philosophy can teach me to act with justice and decency
when I must engage in the business of the court.
6.13
When
we have meat and other such eatables before us we receive the impression, that
this is the dead body of a fish, and this is the dead body of a bird, or of a
pig.
And
again, that this Falernian wine is only a little grape juice, and this purple
robe is some sheep's wool dyed with the blood of a shellfish.
Such
then are these impressions, and they reach the things themselves and penetrate
them, and so we see what kind of things they are.
Just
in the same way ought we to act all through life, and where there are things that
appear most worthy of our approbation, we ought to lay them bare and look at
their worthlessness, and strip them of all the words by which they are exalted.
For
outward show is a wonderful perverter of the reason, and when you are most sure
that you are employed about things worth your pains, it is then that it cheats you
most. Consider then what Crates says of Xenocrates himself.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.13 (tr
Long)
We may be craving a fine rack of
lamb, but may be disgusted when we are told that we are eating a youngster’s corpse.
I once turned off a friend from a fancy bottle of wine by suggesting that we
were paying quite a handsome sum to consume yeast droppings. An old Austrian
joke has it that a man at a restaurant was told that the special for the day
was beef tongue. “That’s terrible!” he cried out. “Why would I eat something
that’s been in a cow’s mouth? Make me some eggs instead.”
This extends to all aspects of life.
We are easily impressed by people’s charm and influence, but sadly disappointed
when we discover they are frail, flawed, and broken creatures just like
ourselves. We venerate celebrities, and treat them as if they were gods, only
to find that they are quite often more like beasts. We worship the power of
money, forgetting that running after little pieces of paper, metal, or plastic
to acquire more useless trinkets is a rather base affair. We will go to most
any ends to have sexual gratification, until we recognize we have been
glorifying our own folly.
The outward appearance of something
can be quite deceptive. I must seek out an impression of what it really is,
down into its constitutive parts, the humble elements out of which it has been
arranged. Our vanity has built up how we want it to look, but breaking it down
again reveals its true nature.
If I can do this, I need not be
consumed by desire, or paralyzed by fear, or riled up in anger. It won’t appear
so enticing, threatening, or dangerous if I look at it closely and carefully.
Most often, I will find that I am making far more of something than it really
is, and attributing far too much value and importance to it. We may give it a prestigious
name or title, but the nature is quite commonplace.
We are too easily deceived by
illusions, and we harm ourselves greatly when we succumb to the trickery of
image and show. Understanding that seeks to grasp the essence on the inside is
diverted by the lure of appearances on the outside. I must, so to speak, strip
away everything that has been falsely assumed or hastily imagined. I find that
this has something in common with the Hindu concept of maya.
Though I suspect it may be about the
Greek Cynic and Platonist philosophers respectively, I have never found an
explanation of the reference to Crates and Xenocrates. It is quite fittingly
Stoic, however, that a phrase Marcus Aurelius seems to assume is well known in
his time has now been lost to history. Everything passes.
6.14
Most
of the things that the multitude admire, are referred to objects of the most
general kind, those that are held together by cohesion or natural organization,
such as stones, wood, fig trees, vines, olives.
But
those that are admired by men who are a little more reasonable, are referred to
the things that are held together by a living principle, as flocks, herds.
Those
that are admired by men who are still more instructed are the things that are
held together by a rational soul, not however a universal soul, but rational so
far as it is a soul skilled in some art, or expert in some other way, or simply
rational so far as it possesses a number of slaves.
But
he who values rational soul, a soul universal and fitted for political life,
regards nothing else except this: above all things he keeps his soul in a
condition and in an activity conformable to reason and social life, and he
cooperates to this end with those who are of the same kind as himself.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.14 (tr
Long)
Some people seek to be satisfied by
possessing and enjoying inanimate things, and they measure the value of life by
their presence. A big house, a flashy car, and plenty of food on the table are
deemed to be most desirable.
Others may consider the possession
of animate things to be more worthy, as did a man I knew in Texas, who defined
himself by how many head of cattle and acres of corn he owned, and he was quite
happy to share those magic numbers every time he saw me.
Others again may pursue a seemingly more
human measure, and order life by the value of people. Yet this is not in the
sense of respecting people for their own sake, but making use of people to
achieve a convenient and profitable end. It is the attitude that perceives
human beings as a resource to be exploited.
In all three cases, we are simply
admiring different degrees of property, whether in commodities, plants and
animals, or other human beings. It is concerned with what is external, and it
revolves around how anything or anyone can be an instrument for us in
increasing our own pleasure, position, or honor.
I have known people of all three
types, though I have been most familiar with the third, since they are the ones
I usually went to school and worked with. They would often think of themselves
as being special, informed, and refined, and were convinced that they were
doing society a great service.
I have seen high-powered educators, lawyers,
and clerics make fun of construction workers greedy to profit from pouring their
concrete, or farmers greedy to profit from selling their crops, but in the end
they aren’t so very different at all. It is perhaps only more clever and
efficient to greedily make a profit out of people themselves.
There is yet another, fourth and
final, group of people Marcus Aurelius speaks about. They are certainly out
there, though we might not notice them. They usually do not draw attention to
themselves, and they care about a very different way of living, so they seem
invisible to many. Regardless of their profession, circumstances, or position,
they measure life by a genuinely human standard, not by how other people can be
useful to them, but by how well they themselves can think and act.
Human reason is an end in itself,
never a means to and end, and the dignity of any person proceeds from the
exercise of his own virtue, never from his instrumentality for others.
Observe how the world tells us, time
and time again, that success is defined by the things we own and the people we
influence. The Stoic stands in sharp contrast, because who he is has little to do with what
he has out there. Ordered by the character of his own actions, he is then
capable of looking at others as fellow subjects, never as mere objects, sharing
in the exact same goal of life.
This is why the Stoic can always
choose to cooperate with others, because he knows he doesn’t have to be a user,
and he must never dispose of anyone.
6.15
Some
things are hurrying into existence, and others are hurrying out of it, and of
that which is coming into existence a part is already extinguished. Motions and
changes are continually renewing the world, just as the uninterrupted course of
time is always renewing the infinite duration of ages.
In
this flowing stream then, on which there is no abiding, what is there of the
things that hurry by on which a man would set a high price? It would be just as
if a man should fall in love with one of the sparrows which fly by, but it has
already passed out of sight.
Something
of this kind is the very life of every man, like the exhalation of the blood
and the respiration of the air. For such as it is to have once drawn in the air
and to have given it back, which we do every moment, just the same is it with
the whole respiratory power, which you did receive at your birth, yesterday and
the day before, to give it back to the element from which you did first draw
it.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.15 (tr
Long)
We may use a variety of analogies to
help us understand a concept, and drawing upon the likenesses of particular
sense impressions to abstract universal principles can be especially helpful.
For myself, this is because an idea may at first seem vague and obscure, but by
binding it to something similar in my everyday experience I can appreciate a
parallel. The abstraction is revealed through what is concrete.
The fact that the Universe is always
in a state of change, a cycle of coming to be and passing away, can be
especially difficult to grasp, especially since I imagine so many things in my
own life that appear to be quite permanent. This is only the result of my
limited perspective, so it can help me to comprehend a bigger picture by
actually focusing on a smaller and more immediate example that shares in the
same qualities.
I was immediately taken by the image
of a man falling in love with a sparrow as it flies by. If I can think of all
those things I am certain are lasting in this light, I will recognize how
foolish my obsessions can be. What true value can there be in something that is
already gone by the time I have noticed it? By stubbornly wishing things that
are inherently passing to be constant, I am hardly appreciating them for what
they are, but dwelling on my own imaginings.
When I was in high school, I would
take the subway every day. One morning, I was drawn to a girl who got on the
train and sat down a few seats away from me. She hardly had a look to her that
would have interested most young men, and that was exactly why she interested
me. She had the biggest green eyes, curly auburn hair, and she was wrapped in
the longest scarf I’d ever seen. She took a copy of Joyce’s Dubliners from her bag, and started
reading. She seemed so kind, and a little sad. I was twitterpated.
She got off a few stops later. I
had, of course, not said a word to her, and I don’t think she even gave me a
single glance. Yet the next morning, all I could think of was the possibility
of seeing her again. And the next morning. And the next. I crafted all sorts of
wild narratives explaining who she was, and why she might possibly take an
interest in me. Simply riding the subway made me think of her, and I longed to find
her for years and years.
The very last time I was ever in
Boston, almost thirty years later, I got on that same subway, and I found
myself sitting exactly where I had been that morning. I had to laugh to myself,
because that same impression came over me, as vivid as the day it had happened
all those years ago. Not only was it long gone now, but it had already been
gone way back then. I made something permanent of what was fleeting, and
created for myself an awareness of something I knew nothing about.
I had fallen in love with a sparrow.
Now if I can only apply that
awareness to all the other aspects of my life, I might be on my way to thinking
about change and renewal like a real Stoic.
Instead of thinking of coming to be
and passing away like static objects popping in and out of existence, I find it
better not to imagine it in terms of things at all, but in terms of a
continuing process. I suspect this is why the Ancients, and especially the
Stoics, liked the image of flowing water, where the substance is inseparable
from its constant activity.
The image of breathing is equally
powerful, as it operates on so many levels. Life itself is only possible through
my motion of breathing, and it is constantly happening, even when I am not conscious
of it. Inhaling and exhaling, expanding and contracting, are characteristic of
the cyclical nature of all change. I receive the air, and then I give it back,
just as my very life is received, and then given back.
Most helpful for me, just as a
single breath, a coming and going in an instant, is but one moment of my own
life, so too my own life is like a single breath in the unfolding of the
Universe. That is the perspective I need to estimate the value of things
rightly.
6.16
Neither
is transpiration, as in plants, a thing to be valued, nor respiration, as in
domesticated animals and wild beasts, nor the receiving of impressions by the
appearances of things, nor being moved by desires as puppets by strings, nor
assembling in herds, nor being nourished by food, for this is just like the act
of separating and parting with the useless part of our food.
What
then is worth being valued? To be received with clapping of hands? No. Neither
must we value the clapping of tongues, for the praise that comes from the many
is a clapping of tongues. Suppose then that you have given up this worthless
thing called fame, what remains that is worth valuing?
This
is, in my opinion, to move yourself and to restrain yourself in conformity to
your proper constitution, to which end both all employments and arts lead. For
every art aims at this, that the thing which has been made should be adapted to
the work for which it has been made; and the vine-planter who looks after the
vine, and the horse-breaker, and he who trains the dog, seek this end. But the
education and the teaching of youth aim at something. In this, then, is the
value of the education and the teaching. And if this is well, you will not seek
anything else.
Will
you not cease to value many other things too? Then you will be neither free,
nor sufficient for your own happiness, nor without passion. For of necessity
you must be envious, jealous, and suspicious of those who can take away those
things, and plot against those who have that which is valued by you.
Of
necessity, a man must be altogether in a state of perturbation who wants any of
these things; and besides, he must often find fault with the gods. But to
reverence and honor your own mind will make you content with yourself, and in
harmony with society, and in agreement with the gods, that is, praising all
that they give and have ordered.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.16 (tr
Long)
What is the aim and purpose of human
life? We may well confuse the lower functions of a rational animal with the
higher functions. Though a man breathes, eats and drinks, reproduces, senses,
feels pleasure and pain, desires, and lives in the company of his own kind,
none of these things define his end.
What will determine his value is how
his reason and choice, which are superior, order and rule over all these other aspects,
which are inferior. That which is conditional in life must depend upon that
which is unconditional. It will do me no good, for example, if I live with
others, but I do not live with them in justice.
In my youth, I was regularly told
that the acquisition of a career would make me happy. It would provide the
comfort of being in a respected position, and bring with it also the financial
opportunities such a life would require. I understood that this could be a
means, if seen rightly, but I doubted that it could be an end. I found my few
friends from college slowly losing interest in me, because they saw that I would
not join them in the pursuit of business or law for the sake of fame and
profit. I then found my even fewer friends in graduate school slowly losing
interest in me, because they saw that I would not join them in the pursuit of
academia for the sake of fame and profit.
I certainly felt lonely, but at the
same time I knew I was struggling to follow the right path, however neglected
and overgrown it had become. Fame is an empty business, because it depends on
seeking the approval of others, and in seeking that approval by the most
shallow and deceptive of means. It ceases to be a life lived well, but a life
lived under the appearance of living well.
What else could remain? The
alternative is for a man to look first to ruling himself, and to define himself
by the excellence of his own character, instead of allowing himself to be ruled
by his circumstances, to define himself through everything other than himself.
This is the ultimate purpose of any action, of any endeavor, and of any art. Be
a good lawyer, doctor, teacher, or salesman, but do so with the constant
awareness that this must help you to be a virtuous human being.
I find it almost impossible to
discuss the crisis of contemporary education with most people, because I am
sadly assuming a very different end for any sort of learning. “We’d fix
everything if we just gave young people decent job skills!” By all means do
this, but it will mean absolutely nothing when separated from inspiring a sense
of meaning and purpose. Producing obedient workers and voracious consumers
cannot replace helping people become their own masters, by developing a moral
identity.
Can’t I pursue a number of ends, and
value a number of different things, so that I might be rich and esteemed, and
at the same time honest and decent? Only insofar as one is subservient to the
other, because I cannot equally and simultaneously define myself both by the
dignity of what I do, along with the convenience of what is done to me.
We confuse our circumstances, to
which we should be indifferent in themselves, with the merit of our thoughts
and deeds, which are the only things in themselves good for human life. It’s no
wonder we get life all backwards.
To seek satisfaction in what is
outside myself will inevitably make me anxious, jealous, and manipulative,
because I must always struggle to try and maintain what was never mine to begin
with. I will resent others instead of loving them, and I will resent Nature
instead of cooperating with her.
Let me plant my vines, or train my
horses, or breed my dogs. Now let me only do this insofar as it makes me a
better man, not a richer or more respected man.
6.17
Above,
below, all around are the movements of the elements. But the motion of virtue
is in none of these.
It
is something more divine, and advancing by a way hardly observed, it goes
happily on its road.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.17 (tr
Long)
Virtue is not a motion of the matter
we see directly around us, which has a passive principle of being moved. Virtue is a motion of the mind, which is an
active principle of moving. A man does not improve himself when his location,
his position, or the state of his body is changed, but he improves himself by
changing the state of his soul.
It is for this reason that many of
us will barely even notice the action of virtue. It cannot be held in the hand,
it cannot be bought and sold, and it is not an object of sense pleasure. Virtue
is, therefore, something that is not, so to speak, on our radar. It does not
warrant our attention, because we do not even recognize an excellence of mind
and the building of character as anything of value.
The vicious man will certainly
notice you with desire when you are convenient to him, and he will notice you
with frustration when you are inconvenient to him. At all other times, however,
he will look right through you.
It took me some time to not think of
this as burden, but as an opportunity. I would feel deeply sad or angry when
people ignored or dismissed me, and I wondered what happened to all those
people who had proudly called themselves friends.
Then it occurred to me that I might
be doing something right when all the wrong sorts of people were disinterested.
They are not the friends I need. I have nothing they want, which is actually
quite a good thing. I can use the coming and going of their attention as a
yardstick for my own success and failure.
And so I can go happily on my own
way, as if I were invisible. I will not need to be in conflict with people who
have no shared values with me. This is why virtue itself can pass unhindered
through suffering and hardship, because it cannot be harmed by any quality so
unlike itself.
When I was working at a church in
the city, there was a fellow who would panhandle outside our door most every
day. We never asked him to leave, because he was doing no harm, and though he
was grateful when we brought him out meals, he would refuse any offers of a
referral to a shelter. “Can’t live like that,” he would say. I would sometimes
sit with him for a moment, and give him whatever was left in my pack of
cigarettes. “I’ve got another one inside,” I would tell him.
We were right across from a major
hospital, so plenty of doctors, nurses, and professional types would walk down
our sidewalk. Almost everyone simply ignored him as he sat there. I once asked
him if it he felt discouraged that so few people seemed to give him any
attention.
He put on an exaggerated grimace.
“You’re paying attention to me, aren’t you? And why would I want people like
that to pay attention to me? Better off without them.”
I asked him if he’d ever read any
Marcus Aurelius.
“Never heard of the guy. Nice
fellow?”
“I’d like to think so.”
6.18
How
strangely men act. They will not praise those who are living at the same time
and living with themselves; but to be themselves praised by posterity, by those
whom they have never seen or ever will see, this they set much value on.
But
this is very much the same as if you should be grieved because those who have
lived before you did not praise you.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.18 (tr
Long)
I have long wondered about our
obsession with receiving posthumous reputation, and I have observed it in a
variety of forms. I suspect there are two of our human weaknesses that come
into play. First, the fact that we will apply very different standards to what
we are willing to give than to what we expect to receive. Second, the fact that
we find it easier to deal with the glory of fame completely separate from
whether or not it actually reflects real human character.
I need to quickly correct myself
whenever I apply inconsistent rules about what I believe I should do, and what
I believe others should do. This not only involves a logical contradiction in
my judgment about the shared rights and responsibilities of all persons, but
also results in the most glaring daily practices of injustice. Needless to say,
I am facing quite a problem when I wish to take the very same thing I refuse to
offer.
I also need to adjust my course
whenever I see fame as worthy in itself, and I therefore try to take a shortcut
to acquiring it. Now I could perhaps receive respect if others recognize some
excellence within me, but if I want the respect without the excellence, the
benefit of being praised regardless of what I may or may not have done, I will dwell
only upon the way things appear, not the way they actually are.
In both cases, I am ignoring that
most fundamental of Stoic principles. I am defining myself by my circumstances
instead of my actions, and I am reversing the proper relationship between them.
Accordingly, I will think that being honored takes precedence over honoring,
and I will seek out honor from those who will possess only a caricature of my
actual living. The further removed they are from my true self, the better.
It is far easier to impress someone
who doesn’t even know me than someone who knows me intimately. The former can
easily fall for an illusion, the latter may well see right through it. I may
not be praised now, of course, but surely I can find contentment in the
knowledge that someday I will be though of as great and important? Posterity
becomes a glittering prize.
Yet seeking the respect of those who
will live after me is just as foolish as seeking the respect of those who lived
before me. Neither one has lived with me, worked with me, shared of anything
with me. There is no prospect of my being his friend.
The vicious man seeks to be given a
fine reputation by the people he can impress the most. The virtuous man seeks
to be a fine friend to the people he can love the most.
6.19
If
a thing is difficult to be accomplished by yourself, do not think that it is
impossible for man.
But
if anything is possible for man and conformable to his nature, think that this
can be attained by yourself as well.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.19 (tr
Long)
When I was first allowed to formally
teach philosophy, I was offered very little advice on how to do the actual teaching.
This might seem odd to someone who has not seen the insides of the higher
education machine, but teaching is rarely a priority for the academic. I was
largely on my own.
My biggest worry was that students
would not be able to grasp the content, though I was only a few years older
than they were. I quickly learned that if I explained an argument as clearly
and directly as I could, made use of examples, and presented it as if it really
meant something, the material itself was never the problem. They were quite
capable of understanding.
The difficulty I confronted was
rather one of application. The ideas may have been interesting, but I found students
had little desire to actually live them out.
“That sounds great in theory, but
how does it help me in practice?”
“Well, let’s be real. No one can
actually go through life that way.”
“Do you realize everything I’d have
to change if I wanted to be like Socrates? It’s too much to ask!”
I would bemoan all the dark aspects
of the same collegiate culture I had recently left myself, but I quickly saw
that I was being just as negative. After all the bells and whistles, the clever
assignments, and the attempts at impassioned discussion, I was left with the
only response I could give.
“Never assume that something
difficult is something impossible. Consider how the best things in life are
often the hardest to achieve.”
And if I really wanted them to
believe me, I would need to be living that way myself. A man can hardly point
to noble truths, insist that they are within reach, and then fail to pursue
them for himself. “You go on ahead, I’ll catch up!” are hardly inspirational
words.
Their hesitation about living a
truly good life most often didn’t proceed from mere laziness, but it came from
the assumption that such a happiness was actually impossible, completely out of
their reach. As I got older, I would find myself telling those students, who
just seemed to get younger and younger, that what was already within them, a
part of who they already were, was never a distant dream or unobtainable goal.
The beauty of it all was that I
needed to hear that just as much for myself.
Those poor folks who know me well
will also know that line from a great film I appeal to about this very
question. Yes, you’ll need to hear it at least one more time:
Aqaba
is over there. It’s only a matter of going.
6.20
In
the gymnastic exercises suppose that a man has torn you with his nails, and by
dashing against your head has inflicted a wound.
Well,
we neither show any signs of vexation, nor are we offended, nor do we suspect
him afterwards as a treacherous fellow.
And
yet we are on our guard against him, not however as an enemy, nor yet with
suspicion, but we quietly get out of his way.
Something
like this let your behavior be in all the other parts of life. Let us overlook
many things in those who are like antagonists in the gymnasium. For it is in
our power, as I said, to get out of the way, and to have neither suspicion nor
hatred.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.20 (tr
Long)
I have often struggled between the
extremes of sticking around the people who were bad for me, or allowing myself
to be consumed by resentment for them. There is a wonderful middle ground of neither
allowing any harm to be done to myself, nor doing any harm to others.
As a rational and a social animal,
man can always love his neighbor as himself, and he does not have to feel anger
or hatred when he gets out of the way of someone who will do him wrong. In my
own experience, I think of this as being able to judge without being
judgmental, or being able to distinguish right from wrong without becoming
self-righteous or dismissive.
And as this describes a harmonious
relationship to our fellows, it can also describe a harmonious relationship to the
entire world itself, and to the workings of Providence. I need never be hateful
to any of my neighbors, and I need never be hateful to any of my circumstances.
Many years ago, I did not step aside
when I saw someone dangerous heading my way. I do not need to delude myself by
claiming that my ignorance was not of my own making. Years of allowing myself
to be dragged about by dishonesty and disloyalty followed, and I consequently
allowed myself to react with resentment or despair. The way I faced all other
conditions and events mirrored this. My own estimation imposed a cynical and
suspicious tint to everything that I saw around me.
Life does not need to be this way. I
must deal with my sparring partners wisely, and I must manage anything that
comes my way without the slightest degree of malice. There is never any need to
cast blame outwards at anyone or anything, only to take responsibility for
myself inwards. I can say no, without spitting venom.
Others will be as they will be, and
I must justly make of myself what I can justly make of myself. I must never be
in conflict with others, or with my world.
6.21
If
any man is able to convince me and show me that I do not think or act right, I
will gladly change.
For
I seek the truth by which no man was ever injured. But he is injured who abides
in his error and ignorance.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.21 (tr
Long)
I spent a number of years teaching
at a school that described itself as being based on both Catholic and Liberal
Arts principles. I believed in both of
these principles. I committed myself to them with all of my heart and soul.
Yet the Vice President for Ministry
abused young women. The Director of Campus Ministry, a married man, had affairs
with students. Both are men deeply respected in the community. I didn’t want to
believe any of it, until I saw it for myself. I saw for myself a priest run his
hands over a young lady’s private bits. I also saw for myself a small and petty
man making out with one of my students on the hood of his car. The
administration, time and time again, ignored the facts, covered for the
offenders, and cast aside the victims.
Surely, they were all good
Catholics?
There was a horrible moment for me,
when I realized I had been wrong. I had supported this institution, through
thick and thin, even as they had never actually supported me. I made excuses
for them, and I made excuses for myself. I wasted years of my life thinking
wrong was right, and I am ashamed that I ever could have been so foolish as to
do so.
Whenever I brought any of this up
with my colleagues, I was told that the risk of scandal against the Church
mattered far more than any of my petty concerns.
And then I grew up. No more. There
is no shame in admitting that I was wrong. There is only shame in not making
right of what I had done wrong.
I believe that the Catholic Church,
as it currently stands, is the most corrupt institution I have ever known. I
say that from having worked for them for over thirty years. I also believe the
Catholic Faith is one of the greatest paths to righteousness and happiness. Go
figure.
I have learned to allow other people
to take their own paths. I have also learned that I must follow my own
conscience, informed by the Divine, and I must never resist admitting my own
errors.
To all those young ladies who told
me about abuses, I apologize. I was wrong not to do more at the time. No one
stood up for you.
To all those young people in
general, who suffered from being treated like tools and being personally
manipulated by a cultist Campus Ministry, I apologize. I was wrong not to do
more at the time. No one stood up for you.
To anyone I dismissed, because I
thought the Church could do no wrong, I apologize. You were right. I was wrong.
No one stood up for you.
There’s a deeply humbling moment
when a man realizes he has messed things up far more than he can say. A good man
then turns things around, and he changes himself, and he changes his own thought
and actions.
Redemption will never come from
being excused by all of those fancy authorities that take my money in exchange
for their glorious blessings.
Redemption will only come from
fixing myself, and ordering my life to God as He would have it, not as I would
have it.
6.22
I
do my duty. Other things trouble me not.
For
they are either things without life, or things without reason, or things that
have rambled and know not the way.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.22 (tr
Long)
When it comes to understanding and
respecting the world, my span of attention must be broad. But when it comes to
what I should worry myself about, and what I should seek to control, my span of
attention must be quite narrow.
I am called to seek the good for all
things, because I am a part within the whole. The way for me to serve the whole
is to rule myself first and foremost, directing my concern at what is rightly
within my power, my own thoughts and deeds.
I do not need to be anxious and
frustrated with what is beyond my scope of responsibility. It is not for me to
decide, and I can rightly trust that Providence will ultimately have it be as
it should. Inanimate things proceed by their own set laws, directed by their
own specific natures. Animate things proceed by their instincts, directed by
their own specific natures. Rational creatures, however, proceed by their own
judgments. It is my own estimation of things that allows me to rule myself.
This, in turn, will form how I
choose to perceive the benefit and harm in other things around me. Does my
neighbor choose evil? I can assist him back to the path of wisdom, but I
cannot, and should hardly attempt, to do it for him. Only he can decide to do
that.
I will often fuss and fret over many
things that were never made for me to determine. Let them be as they must, but
let me be certain to adapt myself rightly. If I am impatient with the world, I
will find my life going very poorly. It is only my own weakness for which I
should offer no quarter.
Peace and contentment do not come
from ordering the world to my ease or preference. They come from ordering
myself to the world. What a profound relief it is whenever I understand this.
I must remember that this is in no
way a matter of selfishness, defeatism, or thoughtlessness. I am called to
focus on my own distinct part to perform. To do anything else would be like a
violinist in an orchestra also trying to play the trumpet parts, or a doctor
telling an accountant how to do his job. What is, in fact, most deeply selfish
is to insist on the power of my choices where it does not belong. Again, as
Plato says, true justice is minding your own business.
A fine priest I once knew told me
that my sense of duty would never ask me to play God, only to be His servant. A
dear friend once told me that it’s always my job to love others, but never my
job to make others love me. These are helpful ways to limit my worry, by directing
my attention on what is my own.
6.23
As
to the animals, which have no reason, and generally all things and objects, you
should, since you have reason and they have none, make use of them with a
generous and liberal spirit.
But
towards human beings, as they have reason, behave in a social spirit.
And
on all occasions call on the gods. Do not perplex yourself about the length of
time in which you should do this, for even three hours so spent are sufficient.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.23 (tr
Long)
Some things in this life, those that
do not possess the power to freely rule themselves, can be there for our use.
Yet our dominion over them, to use a familiar phrase, can surely never be one
of greed or exploitation. It is necessary to make use of things well, always
keeping in mind how their benefits exist for all of Nature, and how they are to
be shared freely and responsibly.
In this way, we sometimes speak of
minerals, or plants, or animals as being resources, though I wonder how often
we confuse the care of stewardship with an exploitation of misguided ownership.
A fellow human being, however, is
not a thing at all, but a person. He is not a what, but a who. I
remember being a bit taken aback when I was still rather young, and I first heard
the phrase “human resources” being used. I was confused about the idea that
another person could be seen as a commodity, or as a means to an end. When I
sincerely asked about this, I was met with blank stares. “Well, that’s what an
employee is, right?”
However we are expected to see the
relationship of people to profit in the world of business, I have always tried
to think on a different level, a human level. Another person shares in the same
powers of judgment and choice as myself, and he is therefore made to be his own
master. Another person shares in the same end and purpose of existence as
myself, and he has the right to seek happiness through his own actions.
He is not something I have authority
over, but someone I share authority with. He is not there only to serve me, but
we are both made to serve one another. Our nature orders us toward cooperation,
not conflict.
Marcus Aurelius often speaks about
practicing our social nature, and I suspect he means something deeper than just
being pleasant or possessing good manners. To me, he is speaking about having
an inherent respect for the dignity of each individual, regardless of any
convenience or utility. Pleasing a friend to get what I want is quite different
from loving a friend to help him get what he needs.
I notice that while I have a
responsibility for the things below me, and a solidarity with the people equal
to me, I must also have a reverence for what is above me. These three
relationships go together, because they are all parts of the whole. Express
this in whatever manner you think is best, but there is no fullness of Nature
without looking to the Divine measure from which all other things proceed. It’s
a package deal.
6.24
Alexander
the Macedonian and his groom by death were brought to the same state.
For
either they were received among the same seminal principles of the Universe, or
they were alike dispersed among the atoms.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.24 (tr
Long)
Some people find this disturbing. I
actually find it quite comforting. I suppose our responses will depend upon
what we think is worthy in life.
We will all end up in exactly the
same state, not a bit of difference between us. That will involve either returning
back to where we came from, and thereby having our being transformed, or simply
ceasing to be entirely. In either case, no amount of acquiring wealth, or fame,
or power alters that fact.
The only remaining question is to
decide how I will choose to live, while I still live. Now is it best to live
according to the measure of my own character, which is in itself the expression
of my nature, or to live according to my position, which depends only upon the
nature of other things? Is a man made by what comes from within him, or by what
is added from outside him?
Some people are so familiar with a
culture of status that they cannot imagine things differently. One of my
students, for example, was baffled that someone might not even want to be a
world conqueror instead of the fellow that cleans up after the horses. He finally concluded, as I recall, that this
could only be because weak people had to begrudgingly accept their failure.
I can only suggest that the true
failure is in neglecting to rule myself first, and then surrendering my worth
to external trappings. It seems to me as silly as judging a man by what his is
wearing, or how many letters go before or after his name, or how many pieces of
colored plastic are in his wallet. Yet many people will do precisely that,
having considered no other possibility.
Just as puzzling can be those who speak
the right words so eloquently, but whose deeds still remain tied to a love of
externals. I need not be confused, however, because I should quickly notice the
inconsistency between what they say and what they do. A colleague of mine once
nobly expressed his regret for not having done the right thing. I was briefly
moved. He then gave himself away completely by adding that he couldn’t do so,
because it would have meant losing his chance for tenure.
Marcus Aurelius is simply reminding
us that none of the titles, achievements, or luxuries of the world will really
change who we are, and the fact that death is the great equalizer can be an
encouragement to quite a different way of living. The Stoic, like any man of
good principles, will never seek out what is extraneous and unnecessary. He
defines himself by the virtue of what he does, not by the convenience of what
comes to him.
It will make no difference if he
lounges about in a palace or works in the stables.
6.25
Consider
how many things in the same indivisible time take place in each of us, things that
concern the body and things that concern the soul.
And
so you should not wonder if many more things, or rather all things which come
into existence in that which is the one and all, which we call the Cosmos,
exist in it at the same time.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.25 (tr
Long)
It becomes frighteningly easy to
ignore the scale, the depth, and the diversity of the Universe, and thereby
underestimate the profound and beautiful pattern in which all things
participate. Even though I am only a tiny part within that whole, I will also neglect
my own significance when I oversimplify my many aspects.
There isn’t just one change going on
within me at any given moment, but a whole array of them, all of them related
to one another and acting upon one another. Sometimes these different motions
seem to be working together, and sometimes they seem to be in opposition, but
each still plays a role within a greater harmony. Thinking, choosing, feeling,
acting or being acted upon, a state of exertion or a state of rest, coming or
going, growing or dying.
The way it is within each part is a
reflection of the order of the whole. When I consider only one aspect of my
existence, and judge myself by that alone, I am failing to understand the
fullness of myself, and what I am made to be. Likewise, when I consider only
one aspect of the whole world, and judge it by that alone, I am failing to
understand the fullness of the Universe, and what it is made to be. Narrow
thinking leads to narrow living.
Some people are intimidated when
they think of the vastness and complexity of things, though I suspect this may
only happen when we are tempted to view ourselves out of context. I don’t need
to feel small or insignificant when I see how big or broad everything else is.
I can just as easily be happy and proud to be a part of something so grand. The
whole and the part do not exclude one another, and the distinct importance of
one thing is not in conflict with the rather different importance of another.
I often think of those lines from The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, by
Douglas Adams:
Space
is big. You just won't believe how vastly, hugely, mind-bogglingly big it is. I
mean, you may think it's a long way down the road to the chemist's, but that's
just peanuts to space.
A friend of mine would use this as
an example of how meaningless life really was. In that vast expanse of space
and time, he said, we are surely just nothing.
“Not nothing,” I would say. “Still
something. Just not everything.” He did not take kindly to this, but we were
still friends.
Yes, just a speck of flesh, on a
pebble circling a star, in a cluster of stars among countless others. But that
speck of flesh can ponder that very meaning, have a conscious sense of wonder at
how that works, and is able to know and to love. That will more than do.
6.26
If
any man should propose to you the question, how the name “Antoninus” is
written, would you not with a patient voice utter each letter?
What
then if he grow angry, will you be angry too? Will you not go on with composure
and name every letter?
Just
so then, in this life also remember that every duty is made up of certain
parts. These it is your duty to observe, and without being disturbed, or
showing anger towards those who are angry with you, to go on your way and
finish that which is set before you.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.26 (tr
Long)
I have often thought that the virtue
of patience serves as a rather special and privileged extension of love. I will
only be capable of being patient with anyone or with anything once I am truly committed
to my sense of the good for anyone or for anything. As soon as I lose sight of
this, my own thoughts and actions will degrade into frustration and resentment.
I will abandon my interest, because my interest is then limited only to my own
gratification.
If I care enough to do something
right, I will continue with the task until it is complete. My obligation will
usually not be fulfilled immediately. I will be in it for the long haul. This
means that I must take everything step by step, slowly and sometimes quite
painfully, resting only when I have lived up to all of the parts within the
whole.
And this is never easy, especially
when I am struggling with mastering my own selfishness. I am responsible for
myself without condition, however inconvenient my situation may be. If someone
else has not understood, I must not blame him, but ask what I can do to explain
it better. If someone else lashes out at me, I must not lash out in return, but
ask how I might improve my concern.
My father, a linguist by trade,
would often annoy me to no end whenever I asked him how a difficult word was
spelled. Trying to teach me that letters were not just symbols randomly strung
together, he would sound out the word for me phonetically, slowly and
deliberately. I would squirm and squeal. “Just give me the darn letters!”
He would do precisely that if I
pressed him, but he would always try again, and again, to have me figure it out
for myself. I could see his jaw clench, and hear the deep breath he would take
as he practiced a patience that grew from love. When I had children of my own,
I understood the torture he surely went through. What parent has not felt the
urge to simply walk away, or to say something quite nasty, or to throw
something at the wall in anger?
I learned that this isn’t simply
about teaching someone how to spell. It’s about helping people to learn for
themselves how to live, and it’s about suffering the most ridiculous of
obstacles to do what is right, while others resist it with all their might.
I realized how love itself was on
the line. I saw how others gave up on me when things didn’t go their way, and I
saw that they did not love me. Far more importantly, I saw how often I treated
others just as poorly, and I saw what I needed to do in order to love.
A good teacher will show complete
dedication to the task of having his students learn, just as a good man will
show complete dedication to the task of having his friends be happy. Are we
resented, mocked, or cast aside? No matter. Try again, because the many parts
of our tasks are not yet done.
People won’t always do that for me,
but I must always do it for them.
6.27
How
cruel it is not to allow men to strive after the things that appear to them to
be suitable to their nature and profitable! And yet in a manner you do not
allow them to do this, when you are vexed because they do wrong.
For
they are certainly moved towards things, because they suppose them to be
suitable to their nature and profitable to them.
“But
it is not so!”
Teach
them then, and show them without being angry.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.27 (tr
Long)
I am unfortunately a man disposed to
melancholy. I suspect I was born with the disposition, and a chain of bad
experiences never made it any better. Accordingly, I instinctively see what is
dark and disturbing before I can bring myself to see what is bright and
uplifting. Whenever I confront greed, malice, thoughtlessness, or betrayal, I
find it hard to simply take it philosophically. I am inclined to take it very
personally.
This makes it all the more important
for me to get my house in order. I actually have a very long fuse, but when
that fuse finally runs out, after I’ve sat there quietly for ages and minded
myself in silence, I can suddenly blow up. An Irish temper is not a pretty
thing.
My anger arises from a sense of
despair, and my despair arises from a sense that the world is just plain wrong.
I am mistaken, of course, because the world will be exactly as it will be. The
world is never really the problem. My attitude about the world is the real
problem.
I will see something I think is
wrong, and I will become indignant. Not righteous at all, but self-righteous. I
will boil and bubble, and even as I am convinced I am in the right, my
reactions will too readily be in the wrong.
Most of us can quite easily succumb
to the temptation of rage. Friends have been lost, families broken, and wars
waged to the bitter end. Hatred can seem so powerful.
But love is more powerful, and only
love ever wins a battle. The battle is never against another, but always
against ourselves.
I have sat there, in those very early
hours of the morning, when any decent man should be asleep, and I have stewed
in my own resentment. Then there will be that moment of realization, where I understand
that I am only destroying myself. He passed you over? She broke your heart?
They treated you like garbage? They all did so because they thought, in
whatever way, that it was right.
Now how does my frustration change
any of that? It never makes anyone else better, even as it always makes me
worse. Hatred only breeds hatred.
A man may hurt me, and my instinct
is to hurt him right back. But what was the cause of his actions? He believed,
for his own reasons, that he was doing something good. Was he mistaken in this?
Perhaps. If he was, my own vengeance
compounds the problem. When I meet the abuser, I need not myself become an
abuser. When I meet the scoundrel, I need not myself become a scoundrel.
There is only one thing I can do to make
it better. Teach, by word and, most importantly, by example. There is a very
good reason Socrates was the honorary grandfather of Stoicism. He taught about
right and wrong, but never forced others into his sense of right and wrong.
6.28
Death
is a cessation of the impressions through the senses, and of the pulling of the
strings that move the appetites, and of the discursive movements of the
thoughts, and of the service to the flesh.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.28 (tr
Long)
It is easier for many of us to see
the negative, to recognize the bad in something long before discerning anything
good. We may, in fact, be deliberately looking out for the things we can
complain about, while ignoring the things we can appreciate.
The Stoic recognizes, however, that the
good or the bad in our lives will depend entirely upon how we make use of our
circumstances. I can, if only I so choose, resist the temptation to dwell upon
the doom and gloom. I can deliberately attend to what will bring benefit
instead of harm. There is a certain satisfaction in being able to “turn” a
situation, having altered nothing about the conditions themselves, but having
altered everything about my estimation of them.
Death, for example, will tend to
immediately make us uncomfortable. It is a necessary component of life, and we
seem to be quite ready to portray it regularly in news and entertainment, but
there is certain awkward hush when it stands directly in front of us. We
formulaically offer our mumbled regrets and prayers, look around nervously, and
hope it will just all go away. It is the end of things, after all, and we don’t
like to think of ourselves ceasing to be.
Regardless of whether we think of
death as the erasing of self or the transformation of self, I need not consider
only what is lost, but I can also consider what is gained.
Nothing, in the Stoic sense, ever
completely ends at all. It changes into something else, and I can rest assured
that I am playing my own necessary part in the unfolding of Nature. I can also
find peace in knowing that those very things I found so troublesome and
frustrating in this life, the ones that often seemed such a burden, will now be
lifted from me.
Marcus Aurelius tells us exactly
what those apparent hindrances have been, and reminds us that we will now be
free of them.
I will be free of the senses, which
can have a way of assaulting me with waves of confusing and disturbing images.
I will be free of pain, which can
leave me weak and cast down, just as much as I will be free of pleasure, which
can leave me enslaved to desire.
I will be free of the thinking that
can be so befuddled, uncertain, and unclear, stumbling about here and there,
unsure of where I have come from and where I am going.
I will be free of the demands of the
body, those ridiculous needs that always required so much my plodding effort
and routine.
I should never allow worry to
consume me in this life, of course, but death can be said to allow me to no
longer have to attend to that pesky temptation of worry. Understood rightly, it
is hardly silly to say that it all depends on how I look at it.
There was a good reason Socrates
suggested in the Phaedo that we can
think of death not as the ending of what is pleasant, but as being liberated from
what is unpleasant. Whatever may become of me, it will at the very least be a
change into something completely new.
6.29
It
is a shame for the soul to be first to give way in this life, when your body
does not give way.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.29 (tr
Long)
We are all quite familiar with an
image of death where a soul, still eager and vibrant, is forced to leave this
earth, because the vessel of the body, all worn and broken, is now too weak to
contain it. There might still seem to be
so much more to do and so many things to discover, and we will regret our
departure like a child being asked to leave an amusement park.
For me, it is much like those many
nights when I was trying to read just the next few lines in a book that had me
hooked, but the day had exhausted me, and the words blurred as I drifted off
into sleep. Perhaps I could dream about what I had wanted to read?
The
spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak.
We may think this is unfortunate,
perhaps even tragic, but what is far more unfortunate and tragic is when the
places have been reversed. There may still be life in the body, energy to
expend, and years left to live, but the soul has given out. All the functions
of life are still there, continuing in a regular routine of making it through
the day, but there seems to be no will, no wonder, no joy. Commitment has given
way to indifference, truth has become blurred, and right and wrong have been
mixed into a sickening sort of gray.
A friend of mine would describe this
as a state where the lights were on, but nobody was home. It wasn’t that a
person was innately slow in their thinking, he said, but that they were simply
no longer choosing to think. The flesh was strong, but the spirit was no longer
willing.
Now while a body may whither or die
from starvation, disease, or just old age, from those harsh conditions that
have been imposed upon it, a soul does not seem to whither or die in quite the
same way. It doesn’t go from the outside in, but from the inside out. There can
be a strong and lively body wrapped around a weak and gloomy soul whenever a
man has chosen to give up the ghost.
It hasn’t been taken from him, but he has freely surrendered it.
I have seen this death of the soul
around me quite often, and I believe most often wherever I also see people
surrounded by all the affluence and gratification they could possibly desire. I
have seen it in myself quite often, and I believe most often whenever I have
decided to let the world rule me instead of ruling myself, or allowed myself to
be measured by conditions instead of character, or chosen to be led by the nose
instead of following my own path.
I don’t need to be a zombie, alive
on the outside but dead on the inside, simply going through the motions. My
sick body may need to wait for the doctor’s prescription, but my sick soul
already contains the means for a cure. I am the one who will decide if I will
choose to know and love. No one else can do that for me.
6.30
Take
care that you are not made into a Caesar, that you art not dyed with this dye,
for such things happen. Keep yourself then simple, good, pure, serious, free
from affectation, a friend of justice, a worshipper of the gods, kind,
affectionate, strenuous in all proper acts. Strive to continue to be such as
philosophy wished to make you. Reverence the gods, and help men.
Short
is life. There is only one fruit of this earthly life, a pious disposition and
social acts.
Do
everything as a disciple of Antoninus. Remember his constancy in every act
which was conformable to reason, and his evenness in all things, and his piety,
and the serenity of his countenance, and his sweetness, and his disregard of
empty fame, and his efforts to understand things.
And
how he would never let anything pass without having first most carefully
examined it and clearly understood it; and how he bore with those who blamed
him unjustly without blaming them in return; how he did nothing in a hurry; and
how he listened not to calumnies, and how exact an examiner of manners and actions
he was; and not given to reproach people, nor timid, nor suspicious, nor a
sophist; and with how little he was satisfied, such as lodging, bed, dress,
food, servants; and how laborious and patient; and how he was
able on account of his sparing diet to hold out to the evening, not even
requiring to relieve himself by any evacuations except at the usual hour; and
his firmness and uniformity in his friendships; and how he tolerated freedom of
speech in those who opposed his opinions; and the pleasure that he had when any
man showed him anything better; and how religious he was without superstition.
Imitate
all this that you may have as good a conscience, when your last hour comes, as
he had.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.30 (tr
Long)
Many of us will find comfort and encouragement
in some familiar reminder whenever we feel confused or disheartened. My mother
will often glance at a photograph of her father, my wife will read from the Liturgy of the Hours, and my son will
look through his collection of minerals. I will either listen to my favorite
music or find myself a brief Stoic passage to get myself back on track.
All sorts of obstacles will seem to
stand in my way, and all sorts of tempting diversions will hover around me. I
am setting myself up for grief if I don’t stop, for however brief a moment, and
find my bearings. Even the simplest of phrases can recharge my commitment, not
because of the words themselves, but because of how they point me to an
appreciation of what is true, good, and beautiful. Simplicity and directness
are often the key, since a happy life is ultimately something quite simple and
direct, free from all the vanities and the noise.
Now this passage is a longer one,
filled with all sorts of characteristics of a life well lived, but I always
summarize it for myself just as Marcus Aurelius does: piety for the Divine,
charity for my neighbor. These two aspects clearly contain all that is
necessary to live according to Nature.
Marcus Aurelius himself, of course,
was a Caesar, but I suspect he is thinking here about how his attitude and
manner of living, whatever his circumstances, must always remain sincere,
humble, thoughtful, compassionate, and respectful. Providence may have asked the
Philosopher-Emperor to wear the purple robe, but he would not let the arrogance
and lust for power of the purple seep into his soul.
Just as my mother thinks of her
father, or anyone can look to the example of another for inspiration, our
fellows can serve us as a means of encouragement, whether they are still with
us in person or only in memory. Here for Marcus Aurelius this model is
Antoninus Pius, his adoptive father and predecessor as Emperor. Keeping in mind
the many virtues of Antoninus helps Marcus pursue virtue for himself.
Sometimes I will fail to recognize whom
I should think worthy of imitation. I will see people who are charming, clever,
imposing, refined, or influential, and I will forget that these qualities,
however appealing, are quite indifferent. I will confuse being an impressive
man with being a good man, and so I get caught up in all sorts of contorted
social games. I find myself distracted from the task, dazzled by appearances.
The simplicity and directness of a good life is only recovered later, when my
head is once again screwed on right.
Whether or not Mark Twain originally
said it, I know from my own experience how accurate this saying is:
When
I was a boy of fourteen, my father was so ignorant I could hardly stand to have
the old man around. But when I got to be twenty-one, I was astonished at how
much the old man had learned in seven years.
6.31
Return
to your sober senses and call yourself back.
As
when you have roused yourself from sleep and have perceived that they were only
dreams that troubled you, now in your waking hours look at these things around
you, as you did look at those dreams.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.31 (tr
Long)
Ridiculous flights of imagination
and contorted trains of thought will often bring me far away from where I need
to be. One helpful exercise for me to keep grounded is to picture myself trying
to wake up from a deep sleep, and to deliberately focus my attention on a real
world over a world of dreams.
Just as I can recognize that the
appearances in my unconscious state do not need to frighten or disturb me, so
too I can recognize equally that the appearances in my conscious state also do
not need to frighten or disturb me. Illusions, whether sleeping or waking, are
not the result of things, but of my estimation of things.
I suppose all of us dream in our own
way, and while my conscious daydreaming will sometimes involve wonderful and
fantastical places, my dreams at night are usually quite unpleasant. I’m hardly
qualified to make complete sense of them, but I can certainly discern certain
patterns and inclinations. This can assist me in giving order to my thoughts
and feelings.
I have one dream that has been
recurring now for over thirty years. It still takes place as if I was six years
old. It seems a pleasant, sunny day, and all of the children in our class are
playing in a field by our school.
Suddenly we all scatter, screaming
and running in every direction. I never see what we are frightened of, but I
somehow know it is there, right behind my shoulder. I run toward a mound, part
of an old aqueduct system that passes through the neighborhood. I grapple to
the top, and then run down the other side.
I am faced with a garden fence, very
low and hardly an obstacle, yet I find that I do not have the strength within
me to climb over it. The only other child who is still with me leaps right over
the fence, exerting no effort at all, and disappears into the backyard of a
house. I gaze at of the back of the house, each detail exactly as it looked
then, my hands still weakly grasping the fence, and somehow knowing this is the
end. I begin to turn my head slowly to see whatever is coming for me.
Then I suddenly wake up, often
screaming. I still have this dream regularly, many decades after I first had
it. What frightens me about it even more is that the actual house in question
was bought many years later by someone I knew, someone who had been a source of
both great happiness and even greater sadness. I could not possibly have known
that at the time, but it is a part of the original dream nonetheless.
Even a first-year psychology student
could have a field day with this, on all sorts of levels, but I have come to
understand it in my own way.
When I have that dream again, and I
am certain that I will, I can find some comfort, as I slowly catch my breath
after having been ripped from a deep sleep. I can know that all of the fear and
worry is something I have created for myself.
When I must face grave concerns in
life again, and I am certain that I will, I can also find some comfort, as I
slowly catch my breath after having been ripped from something quite like a
deep sleep. I can know that all of the fear and worry is something I have
created for myself.
6.32
I
consist of a little body and a soul. Now to this little body all things are
indifferent, for it is not able to perceive differences.
But
to the understanding those things only are indifferent, which are not the works
of its own activity. But whatever things are the works of its own activity, all
these are in its power.
And
of these, however, only those that are done with reference to the present, for
as to the future and the past activities of the mind, even these are for the
present indifferent.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.32 (tr
Long)
The Stoic concept of indifference is
often confused with apathy in our age of “meh” and “What, me worry?” The point
is not that we shouldn’t care, or that things do not contain a good according
to their own nature, but rather that external things are only good for our nature insofar as they help us in
being virtuous, and bad for our
nature insofar as they hinder us from being virtuous. The benefit or harm of
any circumstances, whatever our preferences may be, is in how we choose to act
upon them.
We are so used to defining ourselves
by the conditions of our body, yet these do not in themselves determine our
moral worth. A body itself is not aware, and a body itself does not choose. Any
moral value in my physical state is relative to my mental attitudes.
Being healthy or sick, young or old,
in pleasure or in pain, strong or weak, do not make a life worthy or unworthy.
How the soul makes use of any and every situation for the sake of character is
what will make a life worthy or unworthy.
I must remember, therefore, to focus
on what is within my power, on what I can do, not merely upon what can be done
to me. My attention must further be directed at what I can do here and now, not
at what I have done in the past, which is no longer within my power, or what I
might do in the future, which is not yet within my power. I can reflect upon
the past and learn from it, or speculate about the future and plan for it, but
only doing something in the present is within my grasp.
Now this may seem a terrible
hindrance to someone who expects his life to be about conquering the world,
even as it is a wonderful liberation for someone who expects his life to be
about conquering himself. The world, however, will be as it is, and is largely
far beyond my control. To seek to rule it is to become a slave to its
circumstances. I will be as I am, completely within my control. To rule myself
at this very moment is to find meaning and purpose within all of my
circumstances.
Many people will perceive their
merit to lie in what they have done, in what they intend to do, or in what
convenience they have in their current situation. None of these things are
really theirs to possess. The busybodies, the grasping men, the wheeler-dealers
are overlooking the one thing that is absolutely and unconditionally their own,
the power of acting in the moment, and of choosing in the moment with wisdom
and virtue. All else is indifferent.
I have sometimes let myself be
determined by the weight of my past, or distracted by the illusion of my
future, or have wallowed in the pleasure of externals in the present. Each has
made me miserable, precisely because I have not been making myself.
6.33
Neither
the labor that the hand does nor that of the foot is contrary to nature, so
long as the foot does the foot's work and the hand the hand's.
So
then neither to a man as a man is his labor contrary to nature, so long as it
does the things of a man.
But
if the labor is not contrary to his nature, neither is it an evil to him.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.33 (tr
Long)
To understand what something is requires understanding what it is for. What is its end, purpose, function,
or goal? Philosophers will sometimes speak of this as a final cause, and it is in practice inseparable from its efficient cause, where it came from, its
material cause, what it is made out
of, and its formal cause, its
inherent structure and identity.
When I was a child, I would often
enjoy going down to my great-grandfather’s basement to sort through all the
strange and wonderful things he had collected over his life. He had been a
carpenter, and so he had many unusual woodworking tools, many of them of a
manual sort that had fallen out of favor when power tools became the norm. I
would look them over, wondering what they were all supposed to do. Sometimes I
would figure it out for myself, but more often my Pipa would explain it to me,
perhaps even demonstrate its use.
Because I now understood why it had
been made the way it was, what at first seemed a confusing collection of
strange pieces of wood and metal with mysterious edges, screws, knobs, and
latches, now took on a meaning for me. By seeing what it was intended to do, I
also saw why the parts were made the way they were.
The best I can manage is to sit out
back with my set of Mora knives and whittle animals from blocks of wood, but I
can imagine his voice telling me which shape of blade would be best for the
task at hand.
Just as a man makes a tool for a
purpose, so too Nature makes all things for a purpose. The form follows the
function, and I can learn the nature of a thing by discerning what it rightly does.
The hand is ordered in such a way that it is made for grasping, and the foot is
ordered in such a way that it is made for walking. Every part of man has a
specific function, and the whole of a man, with all the parts joined together,
also has a unified function. We might add further that all men, an all the
things in this world, animate and inanimate, serve a role within the order of
the whole Universe.
A hand acts according to its nature
when it helps us to manipulate things, and a foot acts according to its nature
when it helps us to get from place to place. Could I use my hands to walk, or
my feet to pick something up? Certainly, and this would hardly be unnatural,
unless it somehow hindered or obstructed either of them from what they were
meant to do in the first place.
What are the actions of a whole man
intended to do? Not merely to live or to feel, but because he is a creature
made with reason and choice, he is made to know what is true and to love what
is good, and to then have all of his actions proceed from these principles.
What else can he do? Anything he chooses, as long as it does not hinder or
obstruct him from wisdom and virtue.
Some people would like you to think
that you must pursue only one very narrow and specific sort of path in life in
order to live well, but what they are really telling you is that they want you
to choose exactly the same way they do. Do not be deceived, because Nature has
given you one great and noble task, to live with understanding and with charity
in all things.
The rest is all relative, including
your profession, your politics, how you eat your eggs and cut your hair, or
whether you even eat eggs and have any hair on your head at all. Good and
decent people are simply good are decent people, regardless of their status and
what tribes they happen to belong to. You know full well who the good and
decent people are.
What will help me the most in being
a man charged with character? I should choose whatever will aid me in that
ultimate goal, and that particular choice is rightly my own. It is natural if
it assists me in practicing wisdom, fortitude, temperance, and justice. It is
only unnatural if it drags me into ignorance, cowardice, lust, and greed.
Don’t make a tool any more complex
than it has to be, and don’t make life any more difficult than it has to be.
6.34
How
many pleasures have been enjoyed by robbers, patricides, tyrants.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.34 (tr
Long)
There is a perfectly good reason
that the Stoics stood in strong opposition to the Epicureans. The Stoics did
not believe that the presence of pleasure, and the absence of pain, defined the
worth of a human being. They knew there was something far greater than all of
that.
I’d like to say that only animals
seek pleasure at all costs, but that isn’t quite true. It is an insult to the
dignity of animals. No, animals will quite often sacrifice their comfort for
the power of their instincts.
I once, in total horror, watched a
mother cat defending her kittens from two wild dogs. Being the foolish old
hippie that I am, I rushed in to help her. I could do nothing, and ended up
with nasty dog bites on my hands and arms. Mother cat had a torn ear, and a
mauled paw, and she was bleeding all over. I backed away, but she stood her
ground. The dogs gave up their efforts. There was surely no pleasure in it for
her.
She even hissed and scratched at me
when I took her and her children to the vet.
Only a human being would be so
foolish as to think that pleasure alone will fulfill him. We do exactly that,
so much of the time. An animal does right by itself when it follows its natural
instincts. A man does wrong for himself when he fails to follow his reason.
What unites all the players, thieves,
or abusers of this world is the sense that their own gratification rules
supreme. Their pleasure may come from the most base and physical sort, but I
have found that it more often comes from a feeling of power, of having control
over another.
Many years ago, I dated a girl who
liked to play the field, as they say. Yes, I know, I should never have gone
there. Lesson learned. One day, she seemed quite on edge. I asked her what was
on her mind.
“I was with your friend Jay last night.”
“Yes, I know, we all had a good
night, but you were drunk, and he drove you home.”
“No, I convinced him to take me to
his place. Then I f***ed him.”
She immediately ran into the ladies’
room, but for a moment before that, I saw a look on her face. It was a look of
the deepest satisfaction. She was having her fun from bragging, and she was
pleased by the shock in my own expression. I’d like to think it had nothing to
do with what he gave her, but perhaps I am mistaken. I suspect it had far more
to do with her sense of manipulating both of us.
I have come to learn that vicious
people enjoy what they do, and it pleases them to no end. Even the worst of
people enjoy their pleasures, however they might choose to find them.
The barbaric folks gratify
themselves. That hardly makes them good folks.
6.35
Do
you not see how the craftsmen accommodate themselves up to a certain point to
those who are not skilled in their craft? Nevertheless, they cling to the
principles of their art and do not endure to depart from it.
Is it not strange when the architect and the
physician shall have more respect to the principles of their own arts than a
man to his own reason, which is common to him and to the gods?
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.35 (tr
Long)
I once sadly had a bit of an adult
version of a temper tantrum, when a high and mighty fellow was pontificating
about how we all should be doing our jobs. He kept saying, over and over, that
nothing was more important than being “professional.”
After about an hour of this, I unfortunately
blew a gasket. “What do you think that word means? You keep appealing to it,
but I have no sense of what it actually involves. Is there some set of directives
for us being professional that I forgot to read?”
The look he gave me clearly told me that
I was not being professional. The only response he could give, full of hemming
and hawing, was that it involved some vague sense of propriety.
“It means, ummm, doing whatever is,
uhhh, acceptable, and, like, sort of appropriate, in, you know, your career,
right?” He then struggled for the rest of his talk not to use his favorite
word.
We all take our jobs quite
seriously, and we do our very best to play by those sacred rules. We may drive
recklessly on the road, speak poorly of others behind their backs, cheat on our
spouses, or neglect our children, but we dare not violate the professional
code.
There, I think, is the root of the
problem, and it is exactly what Marcus Aurelius is calling us out for. I may be
quite committed to being a good doctor, or lawyer, or banker. Now when did I
lose track of being a good human being? I will spend my youth learning the tricks
of the trade, my adult years practicing them, and my retirement basking in my
glory. In all of my time being a professional, did I actually spend any of my
efforts in being loving and understanding?
“Well, you can’t learn that in
school, obviously!”
No, I can’t. I can learn to do what
is expected of me professionally in school. But life should teach me, right
from the start, about virtue. Why am I so dedicated to the skills of my job,
about making widgets, about selling doohickeys, and coloring within the lines,
while I ignore the only thing I was actually made for, to live well?
These are uncomfortable questions.
Perhaps we can appoint a professional committee to discuss them, while I
continue to worry more about my career than my character.
6.36
Asia
and Europe are corners of the Universe. All the sea is a drop in the Universe.
Athos is a little clod of the Universe. All the present time is a point in
eternity. All things are little, changeable, perishable.
All
things come from there, from that universal ruling power, either directly
proceeding, or by way of sequence.
And
accordingly the lion's gaping jaws, and that which is poisonous, and every
harmful thing, as a thorn, as mud, are after-products of the grand and
beautiful.
Do
not then imagine that they are of another kind from that which you venerate,
but form a just opinion of the source of all.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.36 (tr
Long)
I was deeply moved when I first read
this passage. I still am. It isn’t just that it is quite profound, but also
that the principle is one the most immediate and practical of tools for
enduring the hardships of life.
I am often too keen to divide my
world into the things that I like, and the things that I dislike. I prefer a
pint of Guinness, a dusty old book, and the fellowship of true friends. I do
not prefer Brussels sprouts, traffic jams, and lawyers. I will revel in the one
set, and I will grumble at the other.
And my problem is that I am not
seeing things from the right perspective, as they truly are within the pattern
of the whole. I magnify them out of proportion, I judge them only by my
passions, and I forget that everything is exactly as it is for a very good
reason.
Everything that seems so big to me,
so desirable or so despicable, is really rather small in the bigger picture. If
I can remember that it is passing, that it is only here in this remote bit of
the world for a moment, I will not be so consumed by longing or by contempt. This
too, as they say, shall pass. That’s good for both the things I love and the
things I hate, and it tells me not to be so caught up in things to begin with.
The value of something should hardly
be measured by my preferences. Not for a want of trying, I simply do not enjoy
the music of Wagner, or of Led Zeppelin. I find both of them pompous and vain.
This has everything to do with my opinion, however, and not with their merit. I
can learn to respect, and even appreciate, the things I don’t have much of a
liking for.
The world is not there for my
convenience. I am here to serve, not to be served. If Providence has put it
there, it has done so wisely. At the very least, that reason could simply be to
teach me to practice reverence instead of resentment, acceptance instead of
dismissal, and to remind me that it isn’t all about me. Even the most
unpleasant things can help me to remember to be pleasant.
Don’t let the “modern” Stoics, the
minimalist Stoics, the cafeteria Stoics mislead you. Nothing in the entire
model will work without a sense of the whole of Nature, of the order of the
Universe, of the breadth of Providence, of the universal ruling power. I can only
live according to Nature if I acknowledge that there is such a Nature,
something bigger than myself, something of which I am a part.
I should not reject the concept of
the Divine because I don’t like something, but I should rather seek to find
what is Divine in everything I dislike.
6.37
He who has seen present things
has seen all, both everything that has taken place from all eternity and everything
that will be for time without end.
For all things are of one kin and
of one form.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.37 (tr
Long)
I have become so familiar with the
Stoic insistence that everything changes, how the continual process of generation,
modification, and destruction is always present in life, that I can easily
overlook the constant patterns of such change. Particular things will come and
they will go, but the shared form by which they come and go remains universal.
The players are different, so to speak, but the stories remain the same. Even
as everything seems new, there is still really nothing new under the sun,
because what is now has once been before, and will soon be again.
When I was very young, everything
seemed quite static and stable, and it took the passage of time to recognize
that what I though would always be there would actually pass away, sometimes
quite unexpectedly.
Then I noticed that things started
to come around again, that the very same circumstances and hardships, the very
same pleasures and pains that I had experienced before, were now being
experienced by others.
I would smile when I saw people
falling in love, because I had known that once. I would cry when I saw their
hearts broken, because I had been there, too. I saw the same hope and despair,
the same dreams and disappointments, the same commitments and betrayals.
Different people were involved, of course, and the settings were different, but
the situations were replaying themselves, and the choices people made, for good
or bad, were on a sort of loop.
The same sun rises and sets over the
world day after day, it shines brightly or is darkened through clouds, over all
sorts of varied landscapes and new generations, but it is still the same sun.
Yes, one day, I imagine, that sun will burn out, and then a different sun, but
still very much like it, will rise and set on a different world, but still very
much like it.
If I had the necessary gifts, I
would write a piece of music chronicling the lives of varied people in three
sequential decades, say the ‘70’s, ‘80’s, and ‘90’s, and make a film to go with
it, sometimes zipping ahead in fast forward, sometimes slowing down to zoom in
on this or that situation.
It could even, perhaps, have a
single, unnoticed observer throughout the whole affair, who alone sees how the
more things change, the more they stay the same. Someone like the nameless figure
in Kieslowksi’s Dekalog, a set of
short films where people struggle with the same old Ten Commandments now as
they always have, and as long as there have ever been rational animals.
The longer I’ve walked through this
world, the more I stumble across the same old problems, with the same old
solutions, and people having to relearn it all over again. This is hardly
mysterious, because it remains the same Nature, ordered by the same Providence,
populated by human beings who may speak differently, have wildly diverging
customs, and look quite distinct, but who ultimately all have the same needs.
They seek to understand, and they seek to love, because they are all creatures
of mind and will, even when they don’t recognize it at the time.
People have often told me that there
are really only a certain number of plots possible in drama, whether they
insist three are three, six, seven, or a few dozen. We may divide them in any
number of ways, just like we can with any set of principles or rules, but it
seems quite fitting that each story mirrors every other that preceded it, and
predicts every other that will follow it.
6.38
Frequently
consider the connection of all things in the Universe and their relation to one
another. For in a manner all things are implicated with one another, and all in
this way are friendly to one another.
For one thing comes in order after another,
and this is by virtue of the active movement and mutual cooperation and the
unity of the substance.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.38 (tr
Long)
Already as a child, I would be
troubled by the sight of suffering, or by instances of death, or by experiencing
a loss in others. When I was eight years old, I came across a dead cat by the
brook next to our school. Hardly able to commandeer a shovel from my teacher at
that tender age, I started gathering rocks from around the park to build
something of a little cairn for her. It became my task for the lunch hour, and,
if necessary, right after school.
Some of the other children, always
eager to mind someone else’s business, saw that I was up to something. A few of
the most aggressive ones gathered around me, and they found my plan laughable.
They took a branch, picked up the corpse with it, and ran around the
playground. A fellow I thought of as my friend, who lived only a few houses
away from me, chased after me with their atrocity, waving it in my face.
“Why don’t you kiss it if you love
it so much?”
As with so many people of limited
character, their sense of attention was also limited. They lost interest in
their ridicule. They threw aside their plaything, and went on their ways. I
finished my job the next morning, before school started. I hid it well. My
little cairn was still there years later, though quite a bit worse for wear,
when I would walk past it coming home from college classes.
My first thought as a child was why
that animal had to die. Had she done something wrong? Did she deserve it for
some reason? It all seemed quite unfair.
My second thought as a child, after
I was laughed at, was why I had to be mistreated. Had I done something wrong?
Did I deserve it for some reason? It also seemed quite unfair.
Yet the animal had died, perhaps
from old age, or from disease, or from a predator. I later learned to
understand that this was quite right, because the passing of one thing for the
continuation of another is not a moral wrong. It is the way of Nature. It’s
part of the cycle and the pattern of the whole. One thing will make way for
something else, the old transformed into the new.
It took me longer to put myself in
the same place. I have come, and I will go. There is no evil in it.
Is there evil in the intentions of
others? Quite possibly, but that is not for me to decide. What will come my
way, will come my way. What will come to another, will come to another. My
judgment and my choice are to live with Nature. The judgment and choice of
another may well be to live contrary to Nature.
In a beautiful irony, we will both end
up playing our own parts. I, however, will have tried to cooperate with Nature,
and another will have resisted Nature. I’d like to believe I got the better
half of the deal.
Those of us given the power of
judgment and choice are granted a great gift. We can struggle against who we
are, and against the whole, and we will find only resentment and conflict.
Or we can embrace who we are, within
the whole, and we will find satisfaction and peace. That choice, of whether to
love or to hate, will make all of the difference.
6.39
Adapt
yourself to the things with which your lot has been cast.
And
the men among whom you have received your portion, love them, but do it truly,
sincerely.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.39 (tr
Long)
We now live in a world where
Stoicism is treated as just another commodity, something to be bought and sold.
I was recently approached by a fellow, who advised me to take his online
courses. There would be a hefty fee, of course, but it would make me completely
happy.
I knew it had all gone south when I
was asked to buy a Stoic amulet. I didn’t know if I was supposed to wear it on
my neck as bling, or display it on my office desk, but I knew it was a set of
lies from the get go.
Philosophers of all types will write
all sorts of things. Some of us write something, and we sometimes ask to be
paid for an article or for a book. We make no real money off of it, of course.
In twenty years, I have earned exactly $402.85 for everything I have ever
written. Ask The IRS.
No, we now have hipster marketing
people telling us that Stoicism is the way to go. Nature is no longer about
Providence, apparently, but just about the “facts.” To be fair, if I was
handsome, rich, and clever, I might also succumb to the temptation. If I’m a
Stoic, they say, I’ll be successful in their world of business.
We also have academics that have
realized how they can make a career for themselves by selling Stoicism by the
pound. To be fair, if I play my game right, and kiss enough ass, I might also
succumb to that temptation. If I’m a Stoic, they say, I might succeed in their
world of scholarship.
But if you are truly a Stoic,
neither money nor fame would ever move you. Don’t sell me courses. Don’t sell
me amulets. Express your character, whether or not anyone else notices.
We are all so used to making the
world our own, and now the business folks and the academics tell us that Stoicism
is another way to do that.
But that isn’t Stoicism. See the
passage above.
Accept, with respect and dignity,
what Nature has given. Then show love, absolute love, with all sincerity and
integrity.
Will it make me rich or famous? As
soon as I ask that question, I am not a Stoic. I am not even a decent person to
begin with.
6.40
Every
instrument, tool, or vessel, if it does that for which it has been made, is
good, and yet he who made it is not there.
But
in the things that are held together by Nature there is within, and there
abides in them, the power which made them.
Wherefore
all the more is it fit to reverence this power, and to think, that, if you live
and act according to its will, everything in you is in
conformity to Intelligence. And thus also in the Universe the things that
belong to it are in conformity to Intelligence.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.40 (tr
Long)
“I’m a Stoic, but I don’t believe in
God. That’s an outdated concept, and it doesn’t fit the facts.”
Now many of my theist friends,
especially those who are in love with the ideology of this or that “-ism”, will
gnash their teeth at such a claim. I will smile, nod my head, and continue
along the way.
If a man sees the effect, but denies
the cause, will it help him if I berate him? If a man says he has reverence for
Nature, but denies the order and Intelligence in Nature, will it help him if I
burn him at the stake?
In life, there is no craft without
the craftsman, and there is no tool without the man who made the tool. The man
who made the tool may be long gone, no longer anywhere in sight. This does not,
however, mean that he never existed to begin with.
Nature is a bit different. The Craftsman
is not someone that was then. The
Craftsman is someone that is now,
because who He is cannot be separated from what He has made, from what He is making.
The old watchmaker analogy only goes
so far. I always say that any analogy is inherently weak, precisely because it
is an analogy, a similarity, and not an identity. If I am looking for God
somewhere up there, I will not find
Him. If I simply look around me, and within myself, why, what a pleasant
surprise! Here He is! To employ
another weak analogy, it’s like looking for my keys all over town, only to find
they were in my pocket the whole time.
The Twelve Steps helped me to save
my life. I know, the skeptics and the naysayers laugh, but that is because they
do not understand the power of the human mind, and the power of the human mind
to move beyond itself. It wasn’t because I was a drunk or a junkie, though I
have been both at points in my life. It wasn’t AA, or NA. It was about
something very different, something much deeper than that. I would ridicule the
sense of tribalism, the sense of conformity, and I would call it all a bunch of
voodoo for ignorant folks.
Then, one day, I sat down, with a
sense of humility for a change, a humility that came from a desperate need.
There I was, embracing the First Step.
And the Second Step immediately
tripped me up.
“There is no God,” I said in anger.
“He was never there for me. If He even made me, He left me to rot!”
And I only said that because I was
looking for God in all the wrong places. He wasn’t up in the sky. He wasn’t a
product the fancy priests sold me. He wasn’t some invisible force that decided
if I was naughty or nice. He, if you choose that term, was immediately present.
To be philosophical about it, certainly transcendent, in the sense that what
orders the whole is above the whole, but most importantly, from a personal
perspective, completely immanent, in the sense that what orders the whole is
within the whole.
In my social service days, we had a
client who had been clean and sober for twenty years. One of the priests I
worked with, a rather self-important fellow, used to make fun of him, because
his “God” was the bottle cap from the last beer he ever drank.
The fellow shrugged off the mockery,
with the good will and good humor of a decent man.
“Of course that bottle cap isn’t
God. It’s a bottle cap. I’m not the first guy to do it this way, and I won’t be
the last. It’s just a thing, but it stands for something, and it helps me to
remember what all of the things in my life actually mean.”
If I want to remember what a good
man is, I try to remember him. If I want to remember “where” God is, I try to remember
what he said to me.
6.41
Whatever
the things that are not within your power, those that you assume to be good for
you or evil, it must of necessity be that, if such a bad thing befalls you, or
the loss of such a good thing, you will blame the gods, and hate men too, those
who are the cause of the misfortune or the loss, or those who are suspected of
being likely to be the cause.
And
indeed we do much injustice, because we make a difference between these things.
But
if we judge only those things which are in our power to be good or bad, there
remains no reason either for finding fault with God, or standing in a hostile
attitude to man.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.41 (tr
Long)
Many of us will be quite familiar
with that moment in life when we truly recognize that people will not always do
right by us. We can sadly twist it into an attitude that people will never do any
right by us at all, a constant sense of suspicion and distrust. We may come to
think of too many of our circumstances as threatening, hoping only to stumble
across an opportunity here or there that might offer some benefit. I am all too
prone to this weakness.
The danger here is actually far
deeper than only being negative. While the optimist may expect things to go
well, and the pessimist may expect things to go poorly, the misleading
assumption in either case is that things will “go” well or poorly at all. For
the Stoic, the good and the bad are not within the events at all. They are
morally indifferent to us, becoming only beneficial or harmful through our
judgment and choices about them.
Hardship, poverty, disease, or death
are not inherently evil. Gratification, affluence, health, or long life are not
inherently good. All conditions offers us the opportunity to do something with
them, and thereby to define ourselves by the only inherent human good, the
exercise of virtue.
As soon as I think of a situation as
helpful or harmful in itself, I will swing wildly between dependence and
resentment. My sense of happiness will rise when the world treats me in one
way, and it will fall when it treats me in another. It is best not to attribute
any moral worth to things that happen at all, but to see things that happen as
a means to acting for myself with moral worth.
Now how often have I jumped for joy
when I have been granted pleasure, and how often have I squirmed in anger when
I have been given pain? There is either a wallowing in gratification, and the
desire for more consumption that proceeds from it, or there is a simmering
rage, and the desire for payback that proceeds from it. I can trace most every
wrong I have ever committed to a weakness in the face of these two impostors.
I will save myself from so much of
my vice and misery if I do not make any distinction between the good and the bad
in external events. I will strengthen myself in virtue and happiness if I
concentrate only on the good and bad in my own thoughts and actions.
As soon as I commit myself to my own
character, which is within my power, instead of my circumstances, which are
outside of my power, I will no longer need to cast blame, or embrace anger, or act
with hatred toward either God or my neighbor. Where I do not perceive fault, I
will not demand correction. I will seek only to correct myself.
6.42
We
are all working together to one end, some with knowledge and design,
and others without knowing what they do; as men also do when they are asleep,
of whom it is Heraclitus, I think, who says that they are laborers and
cooperators in the things which take place in the Universe.
But
men cooperate after different fashions. And even those cooperate abundantly,
who find fault with what happens and those who try to oppose it and to hinder
it. For the Universe had need even of such men as these.
It
remains then for you to understand among what kind of workmen you place
yourself. For he who rules all things will certainly make a right use of you,
and he will receive you among some part of the cooperators and of those whose
labors conduce to one end.
But
do not be such a part as the mean and ridiculous verse in the play, which
Chrysippus speaks of.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.42 (tr
Long)
Some things will act for the sake of
the good through their own awareness and choice, while others will do so only from
ignorance and necessity. Each sort will play a certain part, and I must decide
of which sort I will have myself be.
“We’ll all end up right where we
need to be,” my uncle once told me. “The only difference will be if we’re glad
and willing, or kicking and screaming.”
Accordingly, I will do my best to
always discover the good in whatever situation I find myself. This is hardly
easy, because we are so used to thinking that the conditions make the man,
instead of the man making something of the conditions. Yet however confusing
the specifics may seem at the time, I can know with certainty that every
circumstance offers an opportunity to choose to act well. If I renounce my
freedom to do so, I will still be of service, but only as an opportunity for
someone else to choose to act well.
What a wonderful way to also
appreciate everything for its own sake. Even the most thoughtless and vicious man
is here, as he is right now, for a reason. He may help me to do what is right
for myself through his own wrong, but most importantly for his sake, he may
learn to do what is right for himself through his own wrong. Providence will
not only permit, but will always encourage, the choice of willing and joyful
cooperation.
The reference to Chrysippus, the
third head of the Stoic school of Athens, is about passages in a drama that are
in and of themselves about immoral or foolish things, but still end up serving
the larger purpose of the whole story. I think, for example, of how a vicious
character in a narrative may well commit terrible deeds, or a buffoon may
stumble about aimlessly, but in a certain way that very vice or buffoonery will
become the occasion for moral improvement. It may serve as a contrast, or teach
a lesson, or provide the very problem to be resolved.
Now I should never wish to be
immoral or foolish, but if I stubbornly insist on following that path, I will
still serve a purpose, just like the villain or the comic relief in a play.
As a student of mine once observed,
knowing how much I love comic books, “Poor Lex Luthor! He always has some
dastardly scheme, and he only ends up giving Superman the chance to put it
right!”
Yes, even Lex has his place. Still,
don’t choose to be like Lex.
6.43
Does
the sun undertake to do the work of the rain, or Asclepius, the bringer of
health, the work of the earth, the fruit-bearer?
And how is it with respect to each of the
stars, are they not different and yet they work together to the same end?
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.43 (tr
Long)
Each thing will play its own part
within the whole. It may seem a small part, but that makes it no less important
for the whole. It is a distinct and different piece, with a role only it is
meant to perform.
I once had a beautiful vintage
Rickenbacker 4005 bass guitar, complete with a stunning fireglo finish. Like
any good Rickenbacker bass, it growled back at me whenever I played it. Heck,
it growled back at me even when I looked at it. Whatever amplifier or effects I
put it through, it would always sound like a beast just barely tamed.
There was only one problem. There
was this little annoying buzz on the D and G strings, especially higher up on
the frets. No one else seemed to notice it, but I certainly did.
“Can’t you hear that?” I’d cry.
“Nope. Sounds fine to me.”
I did everything I could to that
poor instrument in order to find that one little flaw. I adjusted the bridge, changed
the gauge of the strings, and I fiddled with the truss rod. I would even put my
ear next to the tuning pegs while playing, convinced at one point that the
problem must be there.
Then one day I suddenly saw it. I
didn’t just hear it, but I saw it. A single screw on the top pickup was
vibrating with the higher notes. What did it take? A mere quarter turn with a
Phillips head, and the satanic buzz was completely gone.
Now this will tell you quite a bit
about my ridiculous sense of obsession, but it also tells me quite a bit about
the order of things. One tiny piece, the tiniest screw, made quite a difference
in how that fine bass sounded to me. That screw didn’t have to be anything
except itself, but it did have to be tightened just right to make the whole
thing work just right.
Each kind of thing is different from
every other kind of thing for a very good reason, because their individual
natures serve within the relationship of all of Nature. The harmony is not from
a mere conformity of identity, but from a rich complementarity of identity.
This is true of any tool a man has made, however simple or complex, which is
itself a mirroring of the pattern of all created things.
We will swing from insisting at one
moment that everything needs to be the same, and at another moment that
everything needs to be different. Sometimes we are enamored of unity, and
sometimes we are drawn to diversity, and we will then foolishly oppose these
principles to one another like jealous lovers.
What we might be missing is that
things are indeed different, but they are different in order to serve exactly
the same greater purpose. The many exist for the one, and exist within the one.
6.44-45
If
the gods have determined about me, and about the things that must happen to me,
they have determined well, for it is not easy even to imagine a deity without
forethought. And as to doing me harm, why should they have any desire towards
that? For what advantage would result to them from this or to the whole, which
is the special object of their Providence?
But
if they have not determined about me individually, they have certainly
determined about the whole at least, and the things that happen by way of
sequence in this general arrangement I ought to accept with pleasure and to be
content with them.
But
if they determine about nothing—which it is wicked to believe, or if we do
believe it, let us neither sacrifice nor pray nor swear by them nor do anything
else which we do as if the gods were present and lived with us—but if however
the gods determine about none of the things that concern us, I am able to
determine about myself, and I can inquire about that which is useful. And that
is useful to every man that is conformable to his own constitution and nature.
But
my nature is rational and social and my city and country, so far as I am
Antoninus, is Rome, but so far as I am a man, it is the world. The things then
that are useful to these cities are alone useful to me. . . .
.
. . Whatever happens to every man, this is for the interest of the universal. This
might be sufficient. But further you will observe this also as a general truth,
if you do observe, that whatever is profitable to any man is profitable also to
other men. But let the word profitable be taken here in the common sense as
said of things of an indifferent kind, neither good nor bad.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.44-45
(tr Long)
I find time and time again that a
great obstacle to moral health is the idea that what is good for me must surely
be bad for another, and that what is good for another must surely be bad for
me. It is the assumption that conflict, between the parts of the whole, or
between the one and the many, is a necessary condition of life.
Yet Providence simply doesn’t
operate that way. That which exists to give meaning and order to the whole,
will truly be in service to the whole. Thankfully, the Universe isn’t run by
the politicians, priests, businessmen, or lawyers who mouth the words, but fail
at the task. The Divine Reason within the whole is not subject to selfishness.
Even if I have difficulty accepting
that Providence cares about me personally, I can surely accept that Providence
cares about the complete good. Am I not even then a part of the complete good,
and therefore cared for?
Even if I cannot accept Providence
at all, an understandable mistake if I were to consider only a human measure to
things, I can surely come to discover that same truth within myself. If I
reflect upon what is useful, beneficial or profitable to me, I can discern that
anything and everything can be good for me, depending only upon my estimation
and actions regarding these things. As a creature of reason, I am made to
choose what is good through my own power, and all circumstances can be ordered
toward what is good.
Insofar as I am a rational creature,
I am also a social creature, made for deliberate cooperation, and as such
nothing that is good for me is separate or opposed to what is good for others.
My neighbor is not only the man down the street, or the fellow citizen of my
nation, but also any fellow citizen of the world. If the exercise of wisdom and
virtue is our shared goal, nothing need come between us.
I will only assume opposition
between men when I pursue false goods. I may think that there is only so much
wealth, or pleasure, or honor to go around, so I mistakenly think I must seize
it from another. But if the human good consists in the excellence of only our
own nature, demanding the possession of nothing beyond our own thoughts and
deeds, then competition and war are an illusion.
In my second year of college, I had
one of those moments where I realized how completely out of the loop I had
managed to become. I was regularly listening to the new album by ABWH
(Anderson/Bruford/Wakeman/Howe), one of the many variations of the classic
progressive rock group, Yes. I very much enjoyed a track called “Brother of
Mine”, and the lyrics simply fit so well into how I was slowly but surely
beginning to see myself and the world:
Just hear your voice
Sing all the songs of the earth
Nothing can come between us
You're a brother of mine
Sing out your sisters
All the dreams of the world
Nothing can come between us
We are the travellers of time
Now admittedly, music of this sort
isn’t for everyone, and the words of Jon Anderson could easily cross that line
into what I often jokingly called the “twee-flakey-hippie-moonbeam-granola-crunchy”
variety. Even so, the sentiment was pleasant and uplifting.
Not to a fellow student who saw me
with the CD one day and gave me a good verbal thrashing, which ended with him
throwing the jewel case against the wall. This sort of music, he yelled at me,
was immoral, unpatriotic, communist, atheist, and all the other terrible things
he could think of. He insisted that if he ever ended up ruling the world, he’d
line up all the perverts who wrote this stuff and have them shot.
The last I had heard, he married a
trophy wife, and was selling real estate in New Jersey.
I had a sort of epiphany right there
and then. Some people really seem to feed off of facing people against one
another. The fact that the good must be shared by all, not possessed by some at
the expense of others, had suddenly never been clearer to me.
6.46
As
it happens to you in the amphitheater and such places, that the
continual sight of the same things and the uniformity make the spectacle
wearisome, so it is in the whole of life.
For
all things above, below, are the same and from the same. How long, then?
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.46 (tr
Long)
It is rarely that I will view a new
film, or watch a new television show, or even read a new book, and not have a
frustrating sense that I have seen all of this before. We don’t even try to
conceal old ideas and plots within a new skin, but are quite happy to openly “reinvent”,
“reboot”, or “reimagine” what came before.
There are some of what we now call
“franchises” that I have seen brought back three times in the span of my life,
differing only in the fashionable cosmetics of politics, in the platitudes that
happen to be trendy at the moment.
That spectacle, the covering of
tired formulas with new buzzwords, can be quite disturbing for me. I do not
necessarily expect a completely new creation, because, after all, there is
ultimately nothing new under the sun. But I deeply appreciate a different
perspective, a transformation of what is already familiar into something I
could not have expected. Therein is the originality of art.
I do not have a personal preference
for the style or for the values of John Gardner’s Grendel, for example, but I have long deeply admired that incredibly
clever turn on an old story. Michael Crichton’s Eaters of the Dead had much the same effect on me.
I suspect the problem is, in the
end, that most of us are hardly being creative or artistic at all. We are
selling a product, and we are drawn to what wins a profit by means of the
lowest common denominator. As it was in the Circuses of Rome, so it is in the
Hollywood of America. And so it is in Washington, on Wall Street, and at the
Ivy League schools.
And just as the pabulum of
entertainment, politics, business, and academics becomes tiresome, so too life
can sometimes feel like it is becoming old hat. There can always remain more
good to be done, more paths to discover, or more work to give us purpose, but
there also comes a time when we are ready to leave the ring, to depart this
mortal coil.
We will have realistically seen what
we can see, and we will have realistically done what we can do. Now it’s time
to go.
I have become so familiar with the
idea that a longer life is a better life, or that I must cling to existence with
all my might and at any expense, that asking “How much more?” seems like a
shameful surrender. Yet quantity should never be confused with quality. Living
more isn’t living well. Living well is living well.
I should, I think, never seek death,
but I should also never avoid it. It will come when it will come, and my only
concern must be about getting my job done within the time prescribed. If I’ve
done the job as best I can, there is nothing wrong in looking forward to a
well-earned retirement.
My part to be played in the
amphitheater is rightly only for so long. There is nothing shameful in
wondering when the performance will be over.
6.47
Think
continually that all kinds of men, and of all kinds of pursuits, and of all
nations are dead, so that your thoughts come down even to Philistion, and
Phoebus, and Origanion.
Now
turn your thoughts to the other kinds of men. To that place then we must
remove, where there are so many great orators, and so many noble philosophers, Heraclitus,
Pythagoras, Socrates. So many heroes of former days, and so many generals after
them, and tyrants. Besides these, Eudoxus, Hipparchus, Archimedes, and other
men of acute natural talents, great minds, lovers of labor, versatile, confident,
mockers even of the perishable and ephemeral life of man, as Menippus and such
as are like him.
As
to all these, consider that they have long been in the dust. What harm then is
this to them, and what to those whose names are altogether unknown?
One
thing here is worth a great deal, to pass your life in truth and
justice, with a benevolent disposition even to liars and unjust men.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.47 (tr
Long)
Some people might be famous for
their various skills and achievements. Other people might be infamous for their
various weaknesses and failures. Most of us are hardly thought of or remembered
at all, and the qualities we so hoped would define us will be of no
significance at all. The ornaments and trappings of life should never be confused
with its true purpose and content.
Now a man might possess the gift of
fine speech, or have an insightful mind, or be a conqueror on the field of
battle, or be talented in ruling others. He may be quick to win a name for
himself, and he may raise himself in power and influence.
None of this will make any
difference at all, if it is not in the service, first and foremost, of being a
good man. Integrity, fairness, and compassion will make all the difference,
because they themselves are about the living, not about the conditions in which
one lives.
I would always pride myself in not
being impressed by people who simply looked attractive, or who were rich, or
who were popular. Yet I would still let myself be drawn in by various other
characteristics, such as a sense of wit, taste, or charm, and then I would
wonder why I still wasn’t finding genuine friends. I may not have been falling
for the usual traps, only a slightly less trendy set of traps. I was confusing
qualities with character, swapping the attributes people had with the virtues
of what they did.
I would then sometimes blame others
for being selfish, deceptive, or thoughtless, when I only needed to take
responsibility for myself in thinking they would somehow be giving, honest, and
concerned, just because they happened to be smart or amusing. People will make
their own choices for themselves, and it isn’t my place to make those decisions
for them. But it most certainly is my place to stand by my own conscience, to
admire and respect others for the right reasons.
It never came to me in a single
moment, but I slowly began to realize that I was never going to be admired,
respected, or listened to in this world. The things that interested me, and the
values I thought best in life, were just not what most others cared for.
Sometimes I might have felt angry with that, because it didn’t seem fair, or I
might have felt sad about it, because I wished people could understand.
But it doesn’t need to breed
resentment, and it doesn’t need to be a tragedy. I will only be worried about
fortune and fame if I still think they are important in life. If I can only
recognize that living well is simply good for the sake of living well, and
nothing else above and beyond it, I won’t be caught up in the externals and the
diversions.
It is a liberation, and not a
burden, to understand what things in life are really worth, and to leave behind
the charms of appearance for the merits of virtue.
6.48
When
you wish to delight yourself, think of the virtues of those who live with you.
For instance, the activity of one, and the modesty of another, and the
liberality of a third, and some other good quality of a fourth.
For
nothing delights so much as the examples of the virtues, when they are
exhibited in the morals of those who live with us and present themselves in
abundance, as far as is possible. Wherefore we must keep them before us.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.48 (tr
Long)
Back when I was a young pup, I would
probably have snorted and snickered at the claim that being moral was somehow pleasurable.
I imagine many people think quite the same thing. There’s the right way, and
then there’s the fun way. We’re somehow convinced that the two just don’t
cross.
It’s a weakness we all share. We
oppose the different aspects of our nature, that of our passions and that of our
reason. We forget to find a balance within ourselves, and we perversely prefer
to be at war with ourselves.
To keep myself from slipping back
into that sort of an attitude, I need to constantly remind myself that what is
good for me will be good for the whole, not for the part at the expense of the
whole, and certainly not for the lesser part at the expense of the greater
part.
The value of my feelings, and the
depth of my pleasures, will be in direct proportion to the value of the actions
from which they proceed. The value of my actions, in turn, follows from the
right exercise of my reason, and my understanding of what is good, both for
myself and for others.
It is only then that I see how the
mere pursuit of pleasure, simply for the sake of gratification alone, was
actually not so pleasing at all. Chasing after lusts becomes a sort of burden,
even an enslavement, providing more misery than it does delight. The drunk
struggles his way through another bottle, the adulterer gets tangled up in his
lies, the grasping man lies awake worried about how he will hold on to his
wealth. I end up chasing a contentment that never seems to come, always looking
for more and more.
There is a perfectly good reason
that the passions alone cannot satisfy me. My human nature is fulfilled by the
dignity of my actions, not merely by the power of my feelings, and how I feel
will depend upon how well I live. In this way, in an odd manner that I would
hardly expect, virtue provides the deepest and most lasting pleasure, even in
the face of all other sorts of suffering, because virtue is the very thing that
makes me whole.
Whenever I have had the good sense
to follow what is right first and foremost, I find myself slowly but surely
discovering a habit of the deepest joy. Since I begin to be at peace with
myself through my thoughts and deeds, I also come to be at peace in my
feelings.
Then I will sometimes foolishly let
myself be tempted by going straight for the gusto, assuming that such a path
will be quicker or easier. After I see the wasteland I have made, I wonder what
I possibly could have been thinking.
It is not only my own virtue that
can delight me, but also surrounding myself with the virtue of others. It is
not only a good example, but also a source of enjoyment to share life with
friends who practice integrity, compassion, and justice.
It is hardly an accident, therefore,
that the most miserable times of my life were those where I attached myself to
people consumed by vice, and the most joyful times of my life were those where
I surrounded myself with people who inspired me with character.
So much of the true delight in life
is indeed from the company we keep.
6.49
You
are not dissatisfied, I suppose, because you weigh only so many litrae and not
three hundred?
Be
not dissatisfied then that you must live only so many years, and not more. For
as you are satisfied with the amount of substance that has been assigned to
you, so be content with the time.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.49 (tr
Long)
I
was a tiny fellow when I was a child, both shorter than all the other boys, and
so skinny that you’d miss me completely if I was standing next to you sideways.
I always wished I that was bigger and stronger, so that I wouldn’t be mocked
and pushed around.
Adolescence
suddenly gave me height, and I was then far taller than everyone else. Now I
was an even more ridiculous beanpole. How I wished I had been made different,
and how I wished I could change it all. But there was really nothing to be done
about it. I could eat voraciously, I could go running for miles and miles, or I
could do dozens of push-ups every day, but I never buffed out, as they say.
That was the way that Nature had chosen to make me.
Since
then, I have always felt empathy for folks who wish they were different, thick
or thin, tall or short, broad or narrow. It was one part for me in
understanding that the dignity of a person never has anything to do with
height, or weight, or measurements. Dignity has everything to do with how we
choose to live.
How
big or how small we are, or how big or how small we might wish to be, is not
much different than how long or how short our lives will be, or how long or how
short we might wish our lives to be. By all means, eat well, exercise, and go
see your doctor, even when nothing seems to ail you. Providence, however, has
assigned a time, just as Providence has assigned a measure for all things.
A
very dear friend in high school, one of the few who didn’t choose to tell me I
looked like a sickly AIDS patient, died in her third year of college. We
usually bickered, and we often disagreed, but I always knew that she was
someone I could trust absolutely. When she was gone, I was deeply affected by
the fact that so many of the good folks seemed to die young, and so many of the
bad folks seemed to be able to hang on forever and ever.
But
there is never any good or bad in how long anyone lives, not in and of itself.
My old friend died at the age of twenty, and in that time she managed to live
with more character and commitment than most people can manage if they live for
a century. To be content with whatever time may be given is never an act of
surrender. It is an act of courage, an acceptance that comes from love, and
never giving in to regret or resentment.
My
friend from high school would often tell me how much it troubled her that she
was quite short, and given that I was quit tall, we would have a good laugh about
it all. Her passing made me think shamefully about how I had not been a decent
enough friend for her, while she was still around.
There
is the key, I think. Love while you can, with all of your heart, and with all
of your mind, and with all of your soul. Tomorrow is never guaranteed.
6.50
Let
us try to persuade them, and even act even against their will, when the
principles of justice lead that way.
If,
however, any man by using force stands in your way, betake yourself to
contentment and tranquility, and at the same time employ the hindrance towards
the exercise of some other virtue.
And
remember that your attempt was with a reservation, that you did not desire to
do impossibilities. What then did you desire? Some such effort as this. But you
attained your object, if the things to which you were moved are accomplished.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.50 (tr
Long)
When I see others doing wrong, I
need to ask myself what I should be doing in response. Now I notice many people
simply looking the other way, assuming that conscience has nothing to do with
their own profit. I would then, of course, become a wrongdoer myself, for the worth
of our actions is both in what we do, and in what we leave undone.
Should I offer friendship and an
appeal to reason, in an attempt to convince them of what is truly good? Yes, if
my intent is properly sincere, and if I am informed by a sense of what is just.
This is within my power.
Should I stand against them, even
when they object or resist? Yes, if by doing so I can still make right of
something that is wrong, and I aim at the benefit of all, not just of some.
This is also within my power.
But what if I am opposed by a
resistance that hinders me from correcting an error, or fixing what has been
broken? This is no longer within my power. By stubbornly fighting back against
what I cannot overcome, I will have failed to make the situation any better, and
I will have only made myself worse by meeting an aggression with even more
aggression.
When the path ahead is blocked, and
I cannot pass through, I can, however, still pass around. If I am denied the
chance to do what is right in one way, that very obstacle can offer me an
opportunity to do right in another. If another turns away from me, I can still
practice patience. If I am denied a fair hearing, I can still be understanding.
If another meets me with hatred, I can still meet him with love.
I can continue to practice virtue in
a new manner, though in a way that was different than what I may have
originally intended. I must remember that each and every circumstance, however
limiting it may at first appear, always provides a chance to act with integrity,
compassion, and justice.
How often have we all seen people
who find themselves in disagreement or conflict, and when an appeal to common
sense is ignored, and when all other reasonable options for resolution have
failed, they nevertheless still insist on fighting it out? That is then no
longer a desire for finding a shared good, but simply the pursuit of
destruction.
I once knew a fellow who felt that
his own thoughtless omission, however unintended, had cost me something very
dear to me. He asked me what he could do to make it right, but I was being
cocky and foolish, and I turned him away. He then tried to fix the problem as
best he could on his own, even as I remained headstrong, and he only desisted
when I rudely told him to mind his own business.
Some time later, I ran across a
wonderful, and completely anonymous, favor that had been done for me. I was
deeply moved, but I could not figure out how it had come my way. As it turned
out, it was a kindness given me by the very man I had so harshly cast aside. He
had never said a word about it, and I only learned of it through others.
When I overcame my shame, I
sheepishly approached him. “Why?” I asked.
“You wouldn’t let me tip the scales
back how I wanted to, so I found something else. You locked your door, but you
left your window open. I hope you’re not angry.”
I was hardly angry anymore. I
learned something there that has stuck with me for years. If I didn’t obviously
know any better, I’d swear he had been teaching me a loving lesson.
6.51
He
who loves fame, considers another man's activity to be his own good.
And
he who loves pleasure, considers his own sensations.
But
he who has understanding, considers his own acts to be his own good.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.51 (tr
Long)
This was one of the first Stoic
passages I was ever exposed to. I only wish I had taken that wisdom to heart
early on, instead of fighting against it for all of those years.
I attended a middle school where I
finally learned something about math, science, and language. It was a parochial
Catholic school, quite different from the rich and trendy public school, in
supposedly the best side of town, I’d been at for seven years. It was also
quite a bit rougher around the edges. I wasn’t quite prepared for the change.
I’d get pushed around for being
different in elementary school. Now, I had the living crap beat out of me for
looking at someone the wrong way. There were days, at the tender age of
thirteen and fourteen, where I just wanted to die. I loved my teachers, and all
that they explained to me, something I’d never experienced before, but a trip
to the bathroom usually involved a humiliation or a beating.
There was a young priest who was our
chaplain, a truly kind and decent fellow. He would come into our school once a
week to offer a brief talk, and to give us an opportunity to have him hear our
confessions. I would take that opportunity each and every time, not because I
was a good Catholic, but because I wanted someone to listen to me, to
understand me.
I would explain to him, time and
time again, about how I felt worthless, and about how others seemed to take
pleasure in putting me down. “I don’t know what I’ve done wrong!” I’d say to
him. “They’re all worried about being popular and having their fun. Why am I so
bad?”
He would sigh, and he would smile,
and I knew that it didn’t come from dismissal or condescension. It came from
genuine sympathy and understanding. “What makes your life good?” he would ask.
I would tell him all about my hopes
and dreams, about wanting to make a difference, about being someone who
mattered, about being that fellow who changes the world.
“Now do you want to be liked, and do
you want to get drunk and high with those other kids? Because you won’t make a
difference, at least not for anything good, if you go that way.”
I would nod and agree, but the pain
didn’t go away. I once assumed I had wasted my time by speaking to a priest.
What did he know?
He knew quite a bit, of course. I
came back to school on a Monday morning, wearing my tie, because wearing a tie
apparently made me better. I opened my desk, and found a note from the priest:
You
may not know it, and you may not accept it, but you are a child of God. You are
special. Don’t lose hope. Find hope in the right things.
His own words were followed by the
passage from Marcus Aurelius quoted above, beautifully written by hand, with
deep care and attention. It seemed like calligraphy. He had clearly spent time
in writing it, and it was now the time for me to spend time in understanding
it.
Do you love being popular? Good for
you. Your life now depends upon others.
Do you love being gratified? Good
for you. Your life now depends upon the objects of your desires.
Do you love the merit of your own
thoughts and actions? Now that’s really what’s good for you. Now you have
learned to be a human being, not a player or a tool.
I still have that wonderful note. It
sits on my bookshelf, right behind me, whenever I make my feeble attempts to think
or to write.
6.52
It
is in our power to have no opinion about a thing, and not to be disturbed in
our soul.
For
things themselves have no natural power to form our judgments.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.52 (tr
Long)
My own disposition is a sensitive
one, so I can easily become discouraged and disappointed by abuse, deception,
or dismissal from people I would like to be able to trust.
Now sometimes I find myself blaming
my own instincts, and sometimes I find myself blaming others for their vices.
Neither path, however, will lead me to any peace. My passions will be as they
are, and they have a way of working by their own patterns. The choices of
others will be as they are, and they should never be confused with my own
choices.
While I can’t usually determine how
something will feel, and I can’t really determine what people will do, I most
certainly can determine what I will make of those circumstances. I may have a
feeling of pain, for example, when someone treats me poorly, but it will be my
own judgment that informs the meaning I give to that feeling and to that
action.
Whether I choose to use circumstances
for my benefit, or choose to abuse them for my harm, or chose to disregard them
entirely, will proceed only from my own estimation. My thinking is certainly
not creating reality itself, but it is shaping how I will permit, or decide not
to permit, that reality to affect me.
I should never think of any external
event, or any impression that follows from an external event, as forcing me to
consider it in one way or in another. The mind is not passively moved about by
objects, but is rather an active principle that forms a conscious awareness of
those objects. I can react in my own way, based upon my own judgment, and there
is the good and the bad in it relative to me.
There is a liberation from the
burden of conditions here, an embrace of true freedom in the face of outside
forces. When I get angry at how I feel, or I resent what someone has done to
me, I am doing nothing less than dodging my own responsibility for my own
happiness. Blame can be so easy, because there is always an excuse.
Accountability can be tough, because I need to be strong enough not to need
excuses.
I need to avoid thinking that
something is inherently good because it is attractive, pleasant, or convenient.
I likewise need to avoid thinking that something is inherently bad because it
is drab, painful, or difficult. The good or the bad in it for me will come only
from the place, the meaning, and the importance I decide to give it.
6.53
Accustom
yourself to attend carefully to what is said by another, and as much as it is
possible, be in the speaker's mind.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.53 (tr
Long)
I know immediately that I am
listening in bad faith when I am simply letting someone speak, in the
expectation that I can then speak my own mind when he is finally done. If I’m
drawn to being especially self-serving, I may even interrupt him, or at least be
certain to absolutely have the last word.
So many of our conversations are
hardly even conversations. They are what I can only describe as mutual
monologues. Like so many bad logical arguments, the start with our conclusions
instead of ending with them, they deliberately distort the meaning of shared
terms, and they change the subject whenever possible. Perhaps worst of all,
they are prone to bringing people down, instead of raising people up.
Listening is not an easy task, because
I need to remember that it isn’t only about my thoughts, about my mood, or
about my own sense of importance. As a rational creature it is my duty to
understand, and as a social creature it is my duty to express compassion and
concern. What a wonderful chance I have to practice these virtues, when another
asks me to listen to what he has to say.
Many years of teaching showed me
that most every class, like most every group as a whole, will have at least one
person who likes to object to anything and everything. A professional meeting
is usually no different. I would have to prepare myself for the inevitable
interjection of “Yes, but—“, regardless of the topic, and regardless of the
perspective being addressed.
On my worse days I would consider it
an annoyance, but on my better days I would try to view it as an opportunity.
Instead of simply looking at it from my side, I could at least try to look at
it from their side. What were these
people actually trying to say, and why
did they think it was important to say it? I might wonder about the soundness
of their thinking, and I might question the integrity of their motives, but if
I claimed to value the truth, then I could hardly offer any less than open ears
and an open mind.
Minds are not meant to be cut off
and separated into their own little boxes. A mind, by its very nature, is
ordered toward other things, and especially toward other minds. Understanding
seeks out what is true and good in a world we all share in common.
When I fail to listen, I fail to be
aware of others for their own sake. When I fail to be aware of others, and I do
not try to see things as they see them, I have also failed myself as a human
being. I will have abandoned my own reason and concern as soon as I have cast
aside their own reason and concern.
My own thinking can only be enriched
when it accepts the thinking of others. I may not agree, and I may choose a
different path, but I must first understand before I can either agree or
choose.
6.54
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.54 (tr
Long)
The Stoic understands something
about the relationship of the whole and the parts, both from the top down and
from the bottom up, that I suggest we all very desperately need.
Many of us, for example, are willing
to assume that what is good for the group as a whole is not necessarily good
for all of its individual members. Whatever benefits the many may require
conflict with what benefits the few, and while we may say that this is
unfortunate, we will accept it as the way of the world.
Conversely, others will take it for
granted that what is good for certain individuals will have to oppose any sense
of a common good. In order for a few great people to succeed, many lesser
people will have to fail. Those are the ropes, they tell us. Life will be
tough. To make an omelet, you’ll have to break a few eggs.
I have seen it in politics, business,
law, and education. I once saw it in the world of religion, when a diocese
began shutting down parishes to cover the vast legal costs of paying for their
abusive priests. In order for the Church to survive, they said, some of us were
going to have to make some sacrifices. So the parish that gave me such comfort
in my Wilderness Years, the church where I then met and married my wife, is now
closed.
We seem to be in a constant pattern
of opposition between the whole and the parts, swinging between the rights of
many at the expense of the few, and the rights of the few at the expense of
many. I’m sorry this isn’t good for you, but it is good for someone else, so
you’re just going to have to suck it up.
Now why do we automatically think
that this must be the case? Why are opposition and conflict, the failure of
some traded for the success of others, considered to be the norm? Cooperation
and complementarity should rightly be the full expression of man’s rational and
social nature. It is hardly a pipe dream, because I do see it happening, in
however small or unobtrusive a manner, on each and every day. People are at
their best when they work together, not when they are broken apart.
Nature herself may seem full of
violence and brutal competition, but we overlook there as well how everything
that changes, all that comes and goes, does so as a part of a greater harmony.
Death and birth are not evils. But greed, exploitation, and injustice are
certainly evils. These are human vices, of course, something only the abuse of
our reason and choice will bring into the mix, and something we can just as
easily decide to walk away from.
What is right and good for the many
is always right and good for the one, and what is right and good for the one is
always right and good for the many. These two aspects are inseparable from one
another. Virtue, the only complete human good, is never a resource or commodity
we need to go to war over. There is more than enough to go around, if only we
choose to live it.
6.55
If
sailors abused the helmsman, or the sick abused the doctor, would they listen
to anybody else?
Or
how could the helmsman secure the safety of those in the ship, or the doctor
the health of those whom he attends?
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.55 (tr
Long)
Few things are more helpful for a
good life, and more demanding of genuine humility, than being willing to listen
to the guidance from those who know far better than we do.
Pride will get in the way. The
patient becomes sicker, because he refuses to take the doctor’s prescription.
The ship founders on the rocks, because the crew has cast aside their helmsman.
We won’t pay heed to what is best for us, because it takes courage and
character to admit that we don’t always have the answers. Trusting in the right
authority makes more, not less, of us.
Such a truth is hardly limited
merely to the professional world, and applies to all aspects of our moral and
personal growth. I cringe when I think of all the times I failed to follow good
advice from decent people, about the careless habits of questionable people. I
would stubbornly insist upon having my own way, and then I would cry and
complain when I had ended up following the untrustworthy and unreliable folks.
But if I don’t know any better
myself, how can I tell whom I should really be listening to? How do I know the
doctor isn’t a quack? Is there way to tell if a man can really steer the ship,
or drive the train, or fly the plane? Having him simply look the part, or carry
the right credentials, or walk along with a confident swagger is, of course,
hardly the same thing as knowing his business.
I have learned, and I have learned
it the hard way, that I should trust the person who already shows me that he is
living in peace:
Every
tree that does not bear good fruit is cut down and thrown into the fire. You will know them by their
fruits.
Or put another way, the reliable and
trustworthy authority is the one who puts his money where his mouth is. He is
showing you that he is worth listening to, because he is showing you the worth
in his living. In the end, it’s always the moral compass that needs to point
the way. Don’t trust a greedy man with your money, don’t trust a glutton with
your health, and never fall in love with a player.
The advice works just as well when
it comes to trusting the right authority within myself, just as much as it does
to the right authority outside myself. When I am feeling tempted, or angered,
or confused, or discouraged, will my first feeling offer the best guidance? No,
it is the calm voice of reason I should be listening to, that one I can barely
hear under all of the chattering of my excited passions.
Let the head rule the gut, not the
gut rule the head.
6.56
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.56 (tr
Long)
When I was younger, I would often
dismiss such concerns. Old people, after all, were the ones who had to worry
about other old people around them dying. I was sure I still had some time left,
before that reality hit me straight in the face.
I learned that I had been wrong for
at least three perfectly good reasons. First, it assumed that what would come
later was meaningless now. Second, it revealed a vanity in my own sense of
security. Third, it all came to me quite a bit quicker than I expected.
I would often be told that youth was
wasted on the young, and I resented such claims. People might not always be
compassionate when they are saying it, but they do say it for a good reason. It
wasn’t just that we were failing to plan for the future. In fact, I knew many
young people who had their entire lives planned out. No, it was that we were
planning for all of the wrong things. We wanted to be rich, gratified, and
respected, and we wanted to keep that going for as long as we could. Our sense
of morality, whether for now or for the future, was secondary to our sense of
utility, whether for now or for the future.
At the same time, I saw loss in
other people’s lives, but I took it for granted that none of that would happen
to me. Youth made me invulnerable, I thought, even when I would dramatically
claim that I had no intention of living past thirty. It all seemed more like a
game than an actual reality. There would be much playing now, and no thought of
any paying later. It should have come as no surprise that so many of the young
and bright professionals I’d gone to school with went from strength to strength
in their careers, while they were completely incapable of forming lasting and
loving relationships with other human beings.
Then, far more suddenly than I could
ever have expected, the changes set in. I had struggled with the passing of my
elders before, but now I struggled with the passing of my peers. It seemed to
pick up the pace before I could ever take proper notice. One died, completely
unexpectedly, and then another. And then another. And I had failed most every
time to make things right before they were gone. Others died in a different,
more symbolic, way, because they moved away, lost interest, and because they no
longer cared, and we no longer had anything in common.
I lost a fine friend from high
school when I was in college. I lost a true buddy from college when I was in
graduate school. I lost a fellow, who knew me better than I knew myself, just
after I got married. Through all of that, people I loved and cared for slipped
out of my life, having chosen different paths, never to be found again.
This will bring great sadness to
anyone who still has a mind informed by a conscience, and a heart informed by
love. It is also a perfectly good reminder for all of us that, whenever things
come and go, we should be called to be the best of friends while we are all
still here. It will all be gone before we know it.
6.57
To
the jaundiced honey tastes bitter, and to those bitten by mad dogs
water causes fear, and to little children the ball is a fine thing.
Why
then am I angry? Do you think that a false opinion has less power than
the bile in the jaundiced or the poison in him who is bitten by a mad
dog?
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.57 (tr
Long)
The state of our bodies, the
conditions we are subject to, and the objects around us can have a powerful
effect on our feelings and perceptions. I still have a very vivid memory of one
day trying to teach about the separation of the soul and the body from Plato’s Phaedo, and how these two aspects of
ourselves exist in two very different realms. Yet I was suffering from a very
nasty flu, and all I could think about was the aches and pains. I had also taken
some pills that made my head quite fuzzy, which meant that there actually
wasn’t much clear thinking happening at all.
There I was, trying to explain a
great concept in the history of philosophy, and the room around me seemed to be
a single pale color, the faces of others appearing as shapeless blobs, my head
throbbing rhythmically, and I couldn’t quite feel my fingers as I tried to
write on the blackboard. I had pushed myself too far, I realized, and now my
very awareness was being assaulted on all sides by illness, weakness, and medications.
It’s hard to speak about the purity of spirit, when matter is very busy pulling
you down.
Now if outer circumstances such as
these can so influence my experience, I think of how much more my own inner
judgments will modify how anything and everything is apprehended. Instead of
being pulled from the outside, I am being pushed from the inside. If I am
thinking that something is bad, I will be moved to feel with pain and
resentment. If I am thinking that something is good, I will be moved to feel
with pleasure and desire. How I perceive events will be shaped by the measures
of true and false, of right and wrong, that I am working with.
I have at some times surrounded
myself with people who were cynical opportunists, and at other times put myself
in the company of people who were dogmatic ideologues. As my own thinking
gradually accommodated to theirs, the very way I saw things inevitably began to
shift. The same situation appeared completely different to me, and my passions
reacted accordingly, depending on the estimation I had adopted. What seemed
beautiful or ugly, desirable or threatening, would change with my opinions.
What I needed to remember, however,
was that while I couldn’t really control whether I got the flu, I could
certainly control the root of my own estimation. The way the world looked to me
would rise and fall with the merit of my own thinking, and the truth of my own
judgments. A false appearance may follow from a fever, or it may follow from a
false opinion, but while the former lay outside of my power, the latter was
most certainly within my power. Let things in the world happen as they may, but
let my thinking be my own.
A mad dog may bite, but my own
disordered judgments are the more powerful, and the more dangerous, influence
on my life.
6.58
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.58 (tr
Long)
What more beautiful, and direct, expression
of Stoic wisdom could we possibly find than this?
You are invincible, if only you
understand what it means to live as a human being.
The world will never do you any
harm, if only you understand the very purpose of the world.
Yet how this flies in the face of
the usual conventions! The measure of a man, they tell us, is how much success
he finds in the world, and depends upon the degree of wealth and esteem he
receives from others. He excels when he wins at the game, he fails when he
loses at the game.
But life isn’t a game, and it isn’t
about winning or losing by the terms of others. Life is about only one thing, a
choice, and a commitment in action to all of the things that follow from that
choice. There are no odds, and there is no gamble. There is absolutely no risk,
unless you decide to risk yourself on things other than yourself.
Who I am, right within my soul, is
entirely up to me. Who you might be is entirely up to you. As regrettable as it
might be, are we in conflict? I will respect how you may choose to think and
live. But do not think, for one moment, that anything you say or do will force
me to change how I choose to think and live. Use your reason to convince me,
but never expect your power to coerce me.
You will never make me decide to be
someone I refuse to be. Go ahead, take my money, my livelihood, my reputation,
my liberty, or my life itself. There is no winning for you there, because the
reason and choice of a single person, however isolated and alone he may be, can
never be conquered.
Nor will a good person, committed to
his character, yield to his circumstances. If I understand rightly that all
conditions can serve my virtue, nothing that happens is ever a hindrance for
me. It is an opportunity. That is the gift of Nature.
Sharing such simple thoughts with
the biggest of bullies has revealed to me how completely powerless those
bullies really are. They throw their weight around, but their weight is
ineffective against the soul of another. They try to hurt even more, but they
end up only giving others a chance to be better.
Others can never really hurt you,
because you are yourself. Nature will never hurt you, because She made you to be
yourself. She made you for Herself.
6.59
What
kind of people are those whom men wish to please, and for what
objects, and by what kind of acts?
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 6.59 (tr
Long)
As clear, direct, and simple as
Stoic principles can be, I still find myself foolishly distracted by the
conventions I see around me, and then I find myself doubting. I suppose this is
because he who seeks a Stoic life pursues a transformation within the self,
while the ways of the world encourage a dependence on everything outside the
self. Sometimes, all the show and the bravado of grasping men can make me
question my commitment.
And if I happen to have my head on
straight, all I need to do is remember how absurd and ridiculous the ways of
fame, wealth, and power really are, and how low I will need to stoop if I
follow that path. Few things help me more than having a good laugh at my own
expense.
If I wish to build my reputation for
its own sake, then I will need to surrender my character in favor of making the
right impression. The sort of people whose attention I seek will themselves
admire status and appearance, and they will be pleased by veneration and
flattery. Let the games begin! There is that perverse grappling to make it to
the top of the heap, to be the first to be noticed, to tell the most convincing
and impressive lies, to satisfy the vanity of bloated and self-important men.
What will all of this posturing get
me? Access to bigger and better trinkets and playthings. So while half of me is
busy sucking up to the big man, the other half is keeping watch over a growing
pile of loot. The dog begs for the bone, and then he guards it jealously.
And throughout the whole process, I
will have to sell my soul. I will have to lie, cheat, steal, betray, and
generally become a vile and shifty person. I am trying to impress all the wrong
people, in order to acquire more useless possessions, all the time neglecting
everything noble within me, the only things that could really make me whole to
begin with.
A witty friend of mine once observed
how rich, spoiled, and vain people would always pretend to be enjoying
themselves at parties and nightclubs, but you just had to watch the forced and
painfully awkward way they danced to remember that you never wanted to become
like them. I can do much the same when I need to knock some sense back into
myself. I can stand back for a moment, and recognizes how foolish all those
silly contortions really are, how empty all that begging for influence and position
makes me.
All of it will be gone before I know
it, and so much of it is already gone. How vain to think that fame is lasting,
that wealth is reliable, that power is permanent.
Sic
transit gloria mundi. So passes the glory of the world.
No comments:
Post a Comment