What is good life? What is happiness? What is success? What is pleasure? How should I treat other people? How should I cope with unfortunate events? How can I get rid off unnecessary worry? How should I handle liberty?
1. Examine life, engage life with vengeance; always search for new pleasures and new destines to reach with your mind. This
rule isn’t new. It echoes the verses of ancient Greek philosophers and
most notably those of Plato through the voice of his hero, Socrates.
Living life is about examining life through reason, nature’s greatest
gift to humanity. The importance of reason in sensing and examining life
is evident in all phases of life– from the infant who strains to
explore its new surroundings to the grandparent who actively reads and
assesses the headlines of the daily paper. Reason lets human beings
participate in life, to be human is to think, appraise, and explore the
world, discovering new sources of material and spiritual pleasure
2. Worry only about the things that are in your control, the
things that can be influenced and changed by your actions, not about
the things that are beyond your capacity to direct or alter. This
rule summarizes several important features of ancient Stoic wisdom —
features that remain powerfully suggestive for modern times. Most
notably the belief in an ultimately rational order operating in the
universe reflecting a benign providence that ensures proper outcomes in
life. Thinkers such as Epictetus did not simply prescribe “faith” as an
abstract philosophical principle; they offered a concrete strategy
based on intellectual and spiritual discipline. The key to resisting
the hardship and discord that intrude upon every human life, is to
cultivate a certain attitude toward adversity based on the critical
distinction between those things we are able to control versus those
which are beyond our capacity to manage. The misguided investor may not
be able to recover his fortune but he can resist the tendency to engage
in self-torment. The victims of a natural disaster, a major illness or
an accident may not be able to recover and live their lives the way they
used to, but they too can save themselves the self-torment. In other
words, while we cannot control all of the outcomes we seek in life, we
certainly can control our responses to these outcomes and herein lies
our potential for a life that is both happy and fulfilled.
3. Treasure
Friendship, the reciprocal attachment that fills the need for
affiliation. Friendship cannot be acquired in the market place, but must
be nurtured and treasured in relations imbued with trust and amity. According
to Greek philosophy, one of the defining characteristics of humanity
that distinguishes it from other forms of existence is a deeply
engrained social instinct, the need for association and affiliation with
others, a need for friendship. Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle viewed
the formation of society as a reflection of the profound need for human
affiliation rather than simply a contractual arrangement between
otherwise detached individuals. Gods and animals do not have this kind
of need but for humans it is an indispensable aspect of the life worth
living because one cannot speak of a completed human identity, or of
true happiness, without the associative bonds called “friendship.” No
amount of wealth, status, or power can adequately compensate for a life
devoid of genuine friends.
4. Experience True Pleasure. Avoid
shallow and transient pleasures. Keep your life simple. Seek calming
pleasures that contribute to peace of mind. True pleasure is disciplined
and restrained. In its many shapes and forms, pleasure is what
every human being is after. It is the chief good of life. Yet not all
pleasures are alike. Some pleasures are kinetic—shallow, and
transient, fading way as soon as the act that creates the pleasure ends.
Often they are succeeded by a feeling of emptiness and psychological
pain and suffering. Other pleasures arecatastematic—deep, and
prolonged, and continue even after the act that creates them ends; and
it is these pleasures that secure the well-lived life. That’s the
message of the Epicurean philosophers that have been maligned and
misunderstood for centuries, particularly in the modern era where their
theories of the good life have been confused with doctrines advocating
gross hedonism.
5.
Master Yourself. Resist any external force that might delimit thought
and action; stop deceiving yourself, believing only what is personally
useful and convenient; complete liberty necessitates a struggle within, a
battle to subdue negative psychological and spiritual forces that
preclude a healthy existence; self mastery requires ruthless cador. One
of the more concrete ties between ancient and modern times is the idea
that personal freedom is a highly desirable state and one of life’s
great blessings. Today, freedom tends to be associated, above all, with
political liberty. Therefore, freedom is often perceived as a reward for
political struggle, measured in terms of one’s ability to exercise
individual “rights.”
The
ancients argued long before Sigmund Freud and the advent of modern
psychology that the acquisition of genuine freedom involved a dual
battle. First, a battle without, against any external force that might
delimit thought and action. Second, a battle within, a struggle to
subdue psychological and spiritual forces that preclude a healthy
self-reliance. The ancient wisdom clearly recognized that humankind has
an infinite capacity for self-deception, to believe what is personally
useful and convenient at the expense of truth and reality, all with
catastrophic consequences. Individual investors often deceive themselves
by holding on to shady stocks, believing what they want to believe.
They often end up blaming stock analysts and stockbrokers when the truth
of the matter is they are the ones who eventually made the decision to
buy them in the first place. Students also deceive themselves believing
that they can pass a course without studying, and end up blaming their
professors for their eventual failure. Patients also deceive themselves
that they can be cured with convenient “alternative medicines,” which do
not involve the restrictive lifestyle of conventional methods.
6.
Avoid Excess. Live life in harmony and balance. Avoid excesses. Even
good things, pursued or attained without moderation, can become a source
of misery and suffering. This rule is echoed in the writings
of ancient Greek thinkers who viewed moderation as nothing less than a
solution to life’s riddle. The idea of avoiding the many opportunities
for excess was a prime ingredient in a life properly lived, as
summarized in Solon’s prescription “Nothing in Excess” (6th Century
B.C.). The Greeks fully grasped the high costs of passionate excess.
They correctly understood that when people violate the limits of a
reasonable mean, they pay penalties ranging from countervailing
frustrations to utter catastrophe. It is for this reason that they
prized ideals such as measure, balance, harmony, and proportion as much
as they did, the parameters within which productive living can proceed.
If, however, excess is allowed to destroy harmony and balance, then the
life worth living becomes impossible to obtain.
7. Be a Responsible Human Being. Approach
yourself with honesty and thoroughness; maintain a kind of spiritual
hygiene; stop the blame-shifting for your errors and shortcomings. Be
honest with yourself and be prepared to assume responsibility and
accept consequences. This rule comes from Pythagoras, the famous
mathematician and mystic, and has special relevance for all of us
because of the common human tendency to reject responsibility for
wrongdoing. Very few individuals are willing to hold themselves
accountable for the errors and mishaps that inevitably occur in life.
Instead, they tend to foist these situations off on others complaining
of circumstances “beyond their control.” There are, of course,
situations that occasionally sweep us along, against which we have
little or no recourse. But the far more typical tendency is to find
ourselves in dilemmas of our own creation — dilemmas for which we refuse
to be held accountable. How many times does the average person say
something like, “It really wasn’t my fault. If only John or Mary had
acted differently then I would not have responded as I did.” Cop-outs
like these are the standard reaction for most people. They reflect an
infinite human capacity for rationalization, finger-pointing, and denial
of responsibility. Unfortunately, this penchant for excuses and
self-exemption has negative consequences. People who feed themselves a
steady diet of exonerating fiction are in danger of living life in bad
faith — more, they risk corrupting their very essence as a human being.
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