By Dan Hagen
“Such as are your habitual
thoughts, such also will be the character of your mind; for the soul is dyed by
the thoughts,” wrote Marcus Aurelius, the Roman emperor turned stoic
philosopher.
And Alan Watts, the English
clergyman turned freelance Zen philosopher, said, “The ego is nothing other
than the focus of conscious attention.”
In other words, what you routinely
prefer to think about, what you routinely permit yourself to think about, is to
a great extent what you actually are, what you make of yourself. Your existence
precedes your essence, as the existentialists observed.
Zen Buddhism and stoicism would agree
that those habitual thoughts — whether rational inquiry or meta-rational
meditation — should be aimed at providing you with an untroubled spirit.
Therefore, inauthenticity comes at
a higher cost than most people realize, bringing its own inner winter of
discontent. As Marcus Aurelius said, “Be content to seem what you really are.”
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