Friday, August 5, 2011

Life Is Shorter Than You Think It Is


“Not just that every day more of our life is used up and less and less of it is left, but this too: if we live longer, can we be sure our mind will still be up to understanding the world--to the contemplation that aims at divine and human knowledge? If our mind starts to wander, we’ll still go on breathing, go on eating, imagining things, feeling urges and so on. But getting the most out of ourselves, calculating where our duty lies, analyzing what we hear and see, deciding whether it’s time to call it quits--all things you need a healthy mind for...those are gone.
So we need to hurry.
Not just because we move daily closer to death but also because our understanding--our grasp of the world--may be gone before we get there” ~ Marcus Aurelius

In a way, it’s worse than I expected; yes, my life is short (the food is terrible, and there are such small portions), but also,  I may not make it from one end to the other with my essential self intact.

Not only that, I am constantly distracted. I am only rarely fully present in any given moment. My mind is lost in future schemes and fantasies, or dwelling on past injustices and glories.  Or sometimes my mind is nowhere. Is this meditation?

I don’t have any special regard for folks who pursue monastic vocations. Anything that takes a person out of the battlefield of life and into the commentary booth is fine and understandable as a lifestyle choice, but not especially noble. What I’m doing this moment isn’t especially noble. It’s necessary for me--because my brain gets clogged up if I don’t vent my thoughts from time to time--but it’s not special.  I’m just wading out of the current to sit on the river bank for a minute. I’m getting perspective.

It’s better to be in the stream though. That’s where the action is, and that’s where things matter most. But it’s very hard to remain in the current for long periods of time without getting caught up in it. It can be strong and surprising, and it’s easy to lose track of meta-goals. It’s easy to get lost in simply trying not to fall down on all the slippery rocks. Maybe that’s meditation.

Whatever the case, Marcus Aurelius caught me by surprise with this one. What’s the point in prolonging my life if it’s going to be a wasteland of distractions? I need to be as conscious and as aware of each moment as I can be, and when I do need to take a breather on the shore, I need to make it as purposeful as possible.

7 comments:

  1. You're in an odd, interesting place right now Spence. Things seem to be percolating in you, though it sounds like its still a bit sub-conscious. That they haven't yet coalesced enough to be fully tagged or labeled by your conscious self. And yet you're actually taking time to figure it all out! How thoroughly un-American of you in that regard!

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  2. Spencer, you are a thoughtful soul. I know Bukowski quotes are annoying, but he's got some good ones. "It's not how long you live, but how long you can go while retaining your moxi."

    Good wishes,
    Mather

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  3. But what do you mean the food is terrible?

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  4. Hey, Mather. Good to hear from you. I like the Bukowski line. He had some good things to say.

    The food is terrible thing is a paraphrase from annie hall. let me see if I can find the actual quotation...

    "There's an old joke - um... two elderly women are at a Catskill mountain resort, and one of 'em says, "Boy, the food at this place is really terrible." The other one says, "Yeah, I know; and such small portions." Well, that's essentially how I feel about life - full of loneliness, and misery, and suffering, and unhappiness, and it's all over much too quickly."

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  5. I would I could stand on a busy corner, hat in hand, and beg people to throw me all their wasted hours.
    dig it.....

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  6. Hi. I was trying to figure out where that quotation by Marcus Aurelius is from. I remembered it being in the Meditations, but I can't seem to find it anymore..

    I've taken a picture of the book which is in the video shown here. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C2zV2lrR02Y

    Any help would be appreciated.

    Aram Harijan

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  7. It's from the Meditations, I just don't remember where. Maybe it's worth another read?

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