“…grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change; courage to change the things I can; and the wisdom to know the difference…” from the Serenity Prayer attributed to Reinhold Neibuhr
I’ve referred to the Serenity Prayer before in this previous post. It’s the “wisdom to know the difference part,” that I want to reflect on today. As a practicing Stoic, I know that there are many facets of my life that are not in my control. But how do I know what is and what isn’t?
In his book, A Guide to the Good Life: The Ancient Art of Stoic Joy, William B. Irvine says we have a trichotomy of control: 1) things we can control, 2) things we have partial control of, and 3) things we have no control over. This is a great idea, it simplifies things. In reality though, I see my life as a series of things that fall somewhere on a continuum of control. For every aspect of our lives, there is a portion that we have control over, and a portion that we don’t. For the sake of analogy, while Irvine pictures a 3-position switch, I tend to see a volume switch (a rheostat) that fate uses to adjust the “control level.”
There is a continuum of control in just about everything in my life. Whether or not I will overeat for dinner tonight is completely under my command (unless I were held at gunpoint and told to overeat…still in my control, but less so). In contrast, whether I will be able to afford a fancy dinner next year is partially in my control, but not completely. I could unexpectedly lose my job, or inflation could take its toll and it would be too expensive. Also, I might get really sick and have to make medical payments as well. So many possibilities by then! How much or how little I can change my destiny depends on an innumerable number of factors. I don’t know where that volume switch of control will be next year, but I am certain it won’t be set at “completely mine.” In any case, my entire day, my future, my end…are largely outside of my jurisdiction…much of it is indeed, fate.
This is great and all, but isn’t the key to serenity knowing what is and is not in your control, and how much? Knowing this is not easy. Not only does it require effort, but it requires quite a bit of intellect, no?
Which brings me to another point. The amount of intellect we have to work with is completely out of our control; basically we are stuck with the brain we have. However, the amount of effort we make to understand the nature of life…well, THAT is completely under our command.
So, the wisdom to know the difference between what we can and cannot change is two-fold. Our natural intelligence is what we are stuck with, but our choice to exert effort on determining what we can change is ours to make completely. There is an irony here: even the “wisdom to know the difference” is both part in/part out of our control.
In any case, determining these things is very important to see things as they are, which I think is essential to living a virtuous life. So regardless of the intellect I am given, gaining “the wisdom to know the difference” requires effort and time on my part. I must take time to reflect on what is truly in my control, and I certainly will have to use the utmost of my reasoning abilities to decipher what I CAN control in my life, and what I must file under “acceptance.” I see no better way to do this than to meditate and reflect on this frequently.