The
single phrase I have found most useful in life is from Marcus Aurelius: “The
first rule is to keep an untroubled spirit. The second is to look things in the
face and know them for what they are.”
But
my favorite quotation contains an inherent contradiction. If you cast a cold
eye on things and see them for what they are, how on earth are you supposed to
maintain an untroubled spirit?
It’s
tricky balancing act, and you have to be careful you don’t tip off into
worrisome musing on one side or seemingly sociopathic indifference on the
other.
Just
prior to the invasion of Iraq in 2003, in a television interview, former first
lady Barbara Bush noted that she was untroubled by it all.
“But
why should we hear about body bags, and deaths, and how many, what day it’s
going to happen, and how many this and what do you suppose?” she told Diane
Sawyer on Good Morning America. “Or,
I mean, it’s, it’s not relevant. So why should I waste my beautiful mind on
something like that?”
In
one way, Barbara Bush was absolutely right — we must not permit negative
thoughts to overwhelm us, particularly if they are about events largely out of
our control. But the person who was determined to invade and occupy Iraq —
justified, as we now know, entirely by lies — was her own son, and Barbara
Bush’s ability to shrug off her own responsibility for the subsequent horror of
that war is breathtaking in its amorality.
So
how to remain untroubled by suffering, without being indifferent to it?
“One
way is to recognize that we do have a choice in where we focus our attention,”
wrote psychologist Jessica Grogan. “While it may be incredibly difficult to
shift away from the negative, it may be less difficult to consciously choose to
emphasize the positive.
“An
adjunct to this attention shift is the technique, applied most notably by Hans Vaihinger
and Alfred Adler, of ‘acting as if.’ This means, essentially, ‘acting as if’
the good things were bigger deals and the bad things were smaller deals.”
But
while shifting focus to maintain calm, how to do we keep unpleasant realities
in our awareness? Perhaps by consciously practicing empathy.
“Through
empathy, you will see how our egos help to keep us separated as individuals
instead of a collective consciousness,” wrote Gregg Prescott. “For example, many
people are too detached from worldwide atrocities, such as famine and
starvation in third world countries.
They may think to themselves, ‘If it doesn’t affect me, then it doesn’t
exist.’ What if it was YOU who was starving? Would you want others to know or care or would you prefer to
have people say to themselves, ‘If it doesn’t affect me, then it doesn’t
exist.’ The truth is that we are
all in this together and if one person is suffering, then we all suffer.”
The
image I kept coming back to is the surgeon, whose mission it is to relieve
suffering and save lives. But to do that job effectively, he must be
dispassionate, calm and controlled.
Untroubled
by trouble, in other words.
ReplyDeleteJim Hampton:
I've come to realize that casting a cold eye on things is indeed the way to maintain an untroubled spirit. I've always taken "cold eye" to not necessarily mean dispassionate. I take it to mean identifying something for what it is, which leads immediately to the untroubled spirit.
Take the impatient, irritated person behind you in the checkout line at the grocery store. The longer they have to wait their turn the more noticeably heated they become until they are outright enraged. Instead of engaging in that person's anger one identifies or "names" the behavior, ie casing a cold eye on it. That action leads immediately to the ability to compartmentalize it. That action allows the untroubled spirit to fill the space where reactionary anger could have been.