Stoic News

By Dave Kelly

Friday, June 21, 2024

Maintaining Inner Peace in Turbulent Waters

 

With a little prompting Claude prodiced this:


"Maintaining Inner Peace in Turbulent Waters"

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"It was Sunday morning, and Marcus woke up looking forward to his usual trip to the public baths. However, before leaving home, he paused to prepare his mind using the Stoic principles he had been practicing.

""I am going to the baths to cleanse my body," he told himself. "But my higher purpose is to cleanse my mind and keep it in harmony with nature's law. At the baths, there will be those who splash me with water, jostle into me carelessly, and perhaps even insult or try to provoke me. I must expect and accept these disturbances calmly."

"With this mindset, Marcus set out for the baths. Sure enough, when he arrived, it was a typically chaotic scene. The bathing area was packed and noisy, with people shouting and shoving. As Marcus entered the water, a rowdy group nearby immediately splashed him aggressively. He felt himself tense up with annoyance, but then consciously relaxed, taking a deep breath. "This is to be expected," he reminded himself, "do not react and lose your calm state."

"A little later, as he was trying to enjoy the warm waters, a bather shoved past him roughly without a word of excuse. Marcus noticed the flare of anger, but immediately cooled it, saying internally "They are oblivious, but I choose to not make myself miserable by craving their consideration."

"Throughout his time at the baths, Marcus worked persistently to maintain his equanimity and practice the Stoic disciplines of desire, action and assent. Whenever he noticed himself getting perturbed by rude behavior or adverse conditions, he gently let go of judgments and external frustrations to regain his centered presence. 

"My purpose here is not merely bathing," he affirmed, "but principally the purification of judgments to attain tranquility - to have desires attending only to what is presently possible, and actions conforming to nature."

"By sustaining this mindful presence through all the commotion and tribulations at the baths, Marcus was able to emerge feeling refreshed in both body and mind. He had met the challenge of unruly external circumstances by maintaining perfect equanimity and dwelling securely in his own reasoned self - undisturbed, imperturbable, and utterly free. It was a small but satisfying victory for living life in accordance with philosophy" -- Claude.


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