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Fascinating Philosophy for Self-Growth
by Evelyn
Cole
Article:
Copyright 2006 Cole's Poetic License
Self-growth, self-improvement, self-esteem, and motivation articles,
books, videos, coaches, ebooks (including mine) inundate the Internet.
They offer advice on how to live better than you are living now.
Good advice, but oh, so contemporary.
Sometimes it's more interesting to read philosophy.
One time a Korean medical doctor hired me to write an article explaining
acupuncture for American magazine readers. He fed me the information but
it took me three weeks to figure out how to start the article. Finally I
realized I had to go all the way back to Plato and Confucius. Through
them I could demonstrate how Western and Eastern philosophical
contemplations led to two completely different branches of medicine.
So, let's consider the elements of the good life according to Aristotle.
I bet you can relate-even if you don't know who he is.
1. The Contemplative Life. You know Plato's old line, "An unexamined
life is not worth living." If you have read this far you carry his
contemplative streak. You ask the big questions.
You ask why. Good on ya, as they say down under.
2. The Active Life. A given. We can't think if we don't move and put
some oxygen in our brains. Besides, life is meant to be lived.
3. The Fatalistic Life. We tend to think of fatalists as pessimists who
assume they have no free will, no control over their lives. Everything
is written in the stars--or someplace.
But Aristotle has a different take. To him, a fatalist is resigned to
the facts of life. He accepts the fact has he no control over the
weather, his president, or his hard drive. This acceptance makes for a
good life.
When the fatalist loses his job, his car, his key to the club, he
doesn't mourn. He says, "I gave it back." He recognizes the transitory
nature of everything. Some of us have to get really old to get to that
point. I met a woman at a writers' conference who had just moved out of
a fourteen room mansion into a two bedroom condo. "I gave it all back,"
she said.
It is a good life when we accept what is inevitable. You know your car
is going to die someday, among other beloved flora and fauna.
4. The Hedonistic Life. Delicious sounding, isn't it? Slightly naughty.
You thought a hedonist was an irresponsible, party-till-I-die kind of
person, I bet. Not according to Aristotle.
Hedonism implies desire. Desire implies want--unsatisfied want.
That's no fun. According to Aristotle, a true hedonist trods a narrow
path between the pain of unsatisfied pleasure and pleasure. He's not
going to pine over the Queen of Sheba when he can have the Queen of Next
Door. He leads a peaceful life, getting his pleasure in protected
context.
5. The heroic and saintly life. If you find joy in helping others you
know you are no better than the sloths you grew up with. You know what
sustains you and it is beautiful and you don't deserve the accolades
people throw at you. It's your good life. You don't expect anyone else
to get the same pleasure out of it that you do.
Sister Theresa never thought of herself as a saint. She just thought she
was living a good life. The firefighters in every city do not think of
themselves as heroes. When one dies trying to save a life, he probably
thinks, "Damn, I goofed," not "They'll bury me a hero."
What we choose to do in life is programmed early. Our judgments of
ourselves and others are hardwired, too. Personally, I measure my own
self-growth by the wonderful decrease in my daily judgments of others..
I think Aristotle would say, if he knew the lingo, think about your
life, live your life, expect bad weather and enjoy it, give up what you
hang on to, seek pleasure safely, not excessively, and do what you do
for its own sake, not for some ridiculous pat on the back.
Then again, I may be right.
I will now drink a toast to your good life with a safe amount of
Hedonistic Port.
About the author:
© Evelyn Cole, MA, MFA, The Whole-mind Writer,
www.write-for-wealth.com
evycole@direcway.com
Cole's chief aim in life is to convince everyone to understand the power
of the subconscious mind and synchronize it with goals of the conscious
mind. Along with "Mind Nudges" and "Brainsweep", she has published three
novels and several poems that dramatize subconscious power.
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