Saturday, November 16, 2019
Marcus Aurelius 3 rules for life
Marcus Aurelius 3 rules for life Marcus Aurelius 3 rules for life How does one live well? Itâs a question that our fellow human beings have been pondering for centuries. Out of that simple question, many philosophies and religions have been born.But no philosophy does a better job at explaining the ideas for living well in a practical way than Stoicism.The Emperor-Philosopher Marcus Aurelius, once the most powerful man on earth, was also a practitioner of Stoicism. Marcus wrote a collection of thoughts, ideas, and rules for life in what was later published as Meditation.Follow Ladders on Flipboard!Follow Laddersâ magazines on Flipboard covering Happiness, Productivity, Job Satisfaction, Neuroscience, and more! He wrote the things in that book for his own use. He was practicing the philosophy of Stoicism. I read that in The Inner Citadel by Pierre Hadot, a book that analyzes Meditations. In that book, I also read that Marcus had 3 rules for life that are found throughout Meditations.Hadot identifies the 3 rules for life of Marcus Aurelius as the following concepts: (1) judgement (2) desire (3) impulse toward action.As I was reading The Inner Citadel, I had difficulty grasping what Hadot meant by those three concepts. He does not tell us what to do with this information. He only says that Marcus Aureliusâs work was dominated by three rules that are based on judgment, desire, and an impulse toward action.Because when I talk about ârules for life,â I think about directives. I think about âdo thisâ and âdonât do that.â I use these types of rules in my life all the time. I look at rules like shortcuts that make life simple.By this, I do not want to minimize the work of Hadot. In fact, I think his analysis of philosophy is the best that I have ever read. His conclusions about Stoicism and philosophy are spot on. And if you want to study Stoicism, I recommend Hadotâs work. But itâs not a light read- even for well-read people.Thatâs why I sat down to translate the 3 rules for life of Marcus Aurelius , as found by Pierre Hadot, in plain English. Here they are (for every rule, I mention a Marcus Aurelius quote that explains the idea):Rule 1: Aim for pure judgment of eventsâSuppress the value-judgment (which you add), and the âIâve been hurtâ is also suppressed. Suppress the âIâve been hurt,â and the harm is suppressed.â (Book IV, 7)We need to put that quote in context. Marcus realized that we make judgments about everything. But instead of making a pure judgment, we make value-judgments.We add a personal twist to our judgment. In the above example, Marcus talks about when something bad that happens to you. In that case, you can say, âSo and so happened to me. And that hurt me.âThe last sentence is the value-judgment part. So when you drop that last part, you donât let the bad thing to make an impact on you. The event merely happened. The end.Letâs say you lose your job. Whatâs worse? The actual event of losing your job? Or you, worrying that you will never find a new job. Of course, itâs the last part- the worrying.When you make a judgment like that and give meaning to events, youâre not making a pure judgment. So remember to look at everything that happens to you for what it is.Did your partner cheat on you? Did you get ill? Did you lose money? Did people make fun of you? Stab you in the back?The events themselves canât hurt you if you donât let them. Hence, aim for pure judgments of events.Did something happen? Fine. Do something or move on.Rule 2: Only desire whatâs inside your controlâLove only the event which comes upon us, and which is linked to us by Destiny.â (Book VII, 57)In his Meditations, Marcus continuously repeats to himself that most things in life are outside of his control. He realized that life is unpredictable. In 2000 years, nothing has changed about that.Shit happens to you all the time. Instead of resenting it or desiring a different life; work with what you have. We all know this piece of advice.âIf life gives you lemons, make lemonade,â so the overused platitude goes. Marcus takes it one step further. Instead of making the best of what happens to you, LOVE it.He knew that most of the things we desire are outside of our control. Look at what you desire. More money? A social media following? A better job? A new car?Or maybe that your partner will always love you? That you always keep your friends?He desired none of the above. He only desired whatâs inside his control or what happened to him. He had faith in something bigger than him. What happened to him happened for a reason.Most things in life that happen are not up to you, my friend. And Marcus realized that like no one else. Only desire whatâs inside your control.Rule 3: Act according to the common goodâIn the first place: nothing at random, and nothing unrelated to some goal or end. Second, donât relate your actions to anything except an end or goal which serves the human community.â (Book XI I, 20)Remove impulses from your life. Make your actions purposeful and never waste your energy on nonsense. Have a goal.This is what Marcus is saying in the above quote. To many, it sounds like too much control. âOMG. This is OCD.âThat may be. If people want to waste their time on this earth let them. Marcus didnât care for those folks. And neither should you.We are here for a reason: To make things better.And thatâs why so many people are drawn to the writings of Marcus Aurelius and other Stoics. They wanted to make the world a better place.I canât think of a more noble goal than that. It is now up to us to keep this philosophy alive. And you can only do that by putting these 3 rules for life in practice.This article originally appeared on Darius Foroux. 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