Daily Readings of FJP

Epictetus: The Art of Living: 82

Informações:

Sinopsis

Virtue is our aim and purpose. The virtue that leads to enduring happiness is not a quid pro quo goodness. (I'll be good "in order to" get something.) Goodness in and of itself is the practice and the reward. Goodness isn't ostentatious piety or showy good manners. It's a lifelong series of subtle readjusting of our character. We fine-tune our thoughts, words, and deeds in a progressively wholesome direction. The virtue inheres in our intentions and our deeds, not in the results. Why should we bother being good? To be good is to be happy; to be tranquil and worry-free. When you actively engage in gradually refining yourself, you retreat from your lazy ways of covering yourself or making excuses. Instead of feeling a persistent current of low-level shame, you move forward by using the creative possibilities of this moment, your current situation. You begin to fully inhabit this moment, instead of seeking escape or wishing that what is going on were otherwise. You move through your life by being thoroughly in