Why Stoicism Matters

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Stoicism is a philosophical school

that began in ancient Greece

and was later dominant in ancient Rome and which continues

to have hugely urgent and important things to teach us

about calm, resilience and emotional stability

Its ideas should be at the

heart of any attempt to remain serene

in face of turbulent, unpredictable

and often mean minded world.

Arguably, the greatest and certainly the most

prolific stoic philosopher was the Roman author and statesman

Seneca who was born in

4 BC in Spain and died in 65 AD in Rome.

A lot of Seneca's thought is known to us from the letters

he wrote to his friends giving them counsel at times

of trouble.

Seneca had a friend called Lucilius, a civil servant

working in Sicily. One day,

Lucilius learned of a lawsuit against him which

threatened end his career and disgrace his good name.

He wrote to Seneca in a panic.

"You may expect that i'm going to advise you to picture

a happy outcome and to rest in the allurements of hope."

Replied the philosopher.

"But i'm going to conduct you to peace of mind through another root

which culminated in the advise if you wish to put off

all worry assumed that what you fear may

happen is certainly going to happen.

This is an essential stoic idea.

We must always try to picture the worst that could happen

and then remind ourselves that the worst

is survivable. The goal is not to

imagine that bad things don't unfold,

it's to see that we are far more capable of enduring them

than we currently think.

To calm Lucilius down, Seneca advised him to himself entirely

at home with the idea of humiliation, poverty

and ongoing unemployment.

But to learn to see that these were,

from the right perspective, not the end

of everything. If you lose this case,

can anything more severe happen to you than being sent into exile

or left to prison? Ask the philosopher,

who had himself, survived bankruptcy and eight years

of exile in Corsica.

Hope for that which is utterly just and prepare

yourself for that which is utterly unjust.

Seneca gave Lucilius a meditation

to maul over in the luxury of his home that he was now

in danger of losing. I'm may become a poor man;

I shall may then be one among many.

I may be exiled; I shall then regard myself

as born in a place to which I shall be sent.

They may put me in chains; what then?

Am i free from bonds now?

Behold this clogging burden of a body to which nature

has feted me.

Seneca tells us that we must grow familiar with

and hold before us, at all times,

not just the sort of events we like to plan for

that are recorded in living memory or are common in our

age group and class. But the entire range

of possibilities - a longer and inevitably

far less agreeable list which finds

space for cataclysmic fires, suckings and

untimely deaths. He wrote:

"Nothing ought to be unexpected by us. Let us place

before our eyes in its entirety the nature of man's

lot. Not the kind of evil that often happens but

the very greatest evil that can possibly happen

We must reflect upon fortune,

fully and completely.

At one point, a friend of Seneca's lost a son.

And the consoling thoughts run in the similar direction.

Marcia, a lady of a senatorial family

was devastated by the death of her son Metilius, not yet 25.

She fell into a period of mourning

that seem to have no end.

Three years after the death, her sorrow have not

abated one bit. Indeed it was growing stronger everyday

So Seneca sent her an essay in which he expressed

the hope that given the length of time that elapsed

since Metilius' death, she would forgive him for going beyond the usual

condolenses to deliver something darker but

perhaps more effective.

To lose a son was surely the greatest grief that could befall a mother.

But given the vulnerability of the human frame,

Metiliusearly death had its place in a merciless

natural order which daily

offered examples of its handy work.

He wrote: “We never anticipate evils before

they actually arrive.

So many funerals passed our doors, yet we never dwell on death.

So many deaths are untimely,

yet we make plans for our own infants.

How they well done the toga, serve in the army,

and succeed to their father property.

They might end up doing such things,

but how mad to love them without remembering

that no one had offered us a guarantee that they would

grow to maturity let alone make it to dinner time.”

If Metiliusdeath had been unexpected for Marcia,

it was only on the basis of a wishful assessment of probabilities.

You say, I didn’t think it would happen, do you think

there is anything that will not happen

when you know that it is possible to happen.

When you see that it has already happened to many.

Seneca imagined meeting Marcia before her birth

and inviting her on a tour of the troubled earth

so she could weigh off the terms of life then choose

whether or not to accept them.

On the one hand, Marcia would see a planet of

all inspiring beauty and occasional goodness.

On the other, a place of intermittent, unspeakable horror.

Would Marcia choose to step into such a world?

Her existence suggested her answer.

Importantly, the stoics Seneca did add

that if things were truly unendurable,

we have no obligation to continue forever.

Here’s another letter from Seneca:

The wise man will live as long as he ought

not as long as he can.

He always reflects concerning the quality

and not the quantity of his life.

As soon as there are numerous events in his life,

that give him trouble and disturb his peace of mind,

he sets himself free.

And this privilege is his not only when the crisis is

upon him but as soon as fortune seems to be maltreating him.

Then he looks about carefully and sees whether

he ought or ought not to end his life on that account.

He holds that its makes no difference to him

whether he’s taking off be natural or self-inflicted.

He does not regard it with fear as if it were a great loss

for no man can lose very much

when but a driblet remains.

It’s not a question of dying earlier or later

but of dying well or ill and

dying well means a escape from the danger of living ill.

Seneca was not advocating random

or thoughtless exits.

He was attempting to give us more courage

in the face of anxiety by reminding us that it is always

within our remit when weve genuinely tried everything

and rationally had enough to choose a noble path out of our troubles.

When we are furious, paranoid, depleted, or sad

the philosophy of stoicism is on hand

as it has been for 2000 years

to nurse us with its hugely fortifying,

distinctive and unusual wisdom and friendship.