
Meditations: A New Translation (Modern Library)

- If anyone can refute me—show me I’m making a mistake or looking at things from the wrong perspective—I’ll gladly change. It’s the truth I’m after, and the truth never harmed anyone. What harms us is to persist in self-deceit and ignorance.
Marcus Aurelius • Meditations: A New Translation (Modern Library)
In a sense, people are our proper occupation. Our job is to do them good and put up with them.
Marcus Aurelius • Meditations: A New Translation (Modern Library)
You take things you don’t control and define them as “good” or “bad.” And so of course when the “bad” things happen, or the “good” ones don’t, you blame the gods and feel hatred for the people responsible—or those you decide to make responsible. Much of our bad behavior stems from trying to apply those criteria. If we limited “good” and “bad” to ou
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Theophrastus says that the ones committed out of desire are worse than the ones committed out of anger: which is good philosophy.
Marcus Aurelius • Meditations: A New Translation (Modern Library)
Someone like that—someone who refuses to put off joining the elect—is a kind of priest, a servant of the gods, in touch with what is within him and what keeps a person undefiled by pleasures, invulnerable to any pain, untouched by arrogance, unaffected by meanness, an athlete in the greatest of all contests—the struggle not to be overwhelmed by any
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pain. The angry man is more like a victim of wrongdoing, provoked by pain to anger. The other man rushes into wrongdoing on his own, moved to action by desire.
Marcus Aurelius • Meditations: A New Translation (Modern Library)
Don’t waste the rest of your time here worrying about other people—unless it affects the common good. It will keep you from doing anything useful. You’ll be too preoccupied with what so-and-so is doing, and why, and what they’re saying, and what they’re thinking, and what they’re up to, and all the other things that throw you off and keep you from
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- When you wake up in the morning, tell yourself: The people I deal with today will be meddling, ungrateful, arrogant, dishonest, jealous, and surly. They are like this because they can’t tell good from evil. But I have seen the beauty of good, and the ugliness of evil, and have recognized that the wrongdoer has a nature related to my own—not of the
Marcus Aurelius • Meditations: A New Translation (Modern Library)
You see how few things you have to do to live a satisfying and reverent life? If you can manage this, that’s all even the gods can ask of you.