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Meditations
Chapter 4 · 1.5 min · 4 of 12

Book 4: Cosmos and Change

A chapter summary from Meditations by Marcus Aurelius.

"If thou art pained by any external thing, it is not this thing that disturbs thee, but thy own judgement about it.

— From Meditations by Marcus Aurelius

Book 4 contains some of the most quoted lines in the work and turns on a single insight: nearly all suffering is a product of judgement, not of events. "If thou art pained by any external thing, it is not this thing that disturbs thee, but thy own judgement about it. And it is in thy power to wipe out this judgement now." Take away the opinion "I have been harmed," and the harm itself is gone; "take away the complaint, 'I have been harmed,' and the harm is taken away."

From this follows his famous teaching on the inner retreat. Men seek retreats for themselves — houses in the country, by the sea, in the mountains — and Marcus calls this longing unphilosophical, "when it is in thy power, whenever thou shalt choose, to retire into thyself. For nowhere can a man find a retreat more quiet and untroubled than in his own soul." The mind can withdraw into itself at any moment and be instantly at peace; you do not need a different place, only a different attention.

The book is saturated with the theme of flux. "The universe is change; our life is what our thoughts make it." Everything is in transformation — the elements, bodies, reputations, the very names of the famous, which fade into oblivion within a generation or two. He reminds himself how quickly all things are forgotten, how short fame is, how the whole earth is a point and the present a knife-edge between two eternities. This is not despair but proportion: against the vastness of time and change, most of what we agitate over shrinks to nothing.

He couples this with the dichotomy of control in practical form — confine your concern to what your own reason can do, and accept the rest as the work of universal nature, which "out of the universal substance, as out of wax, now moulds a horse, and breaks it up, and uses the material for a tree, then for a man, then for something else."

The usable core: your distress lives in your appraisal of a thing, not in the thing, and the appraisal is editable in the moment. Practice the inner retreat — a few seconds of stepping back into your own reasoning mind — and hold every grievance up against the scale of cosmic change, where it almost always proves smaller than it felt.

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Book 5: The Morning Question
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