Marcus AureliusMeditationsThe View from Above
Marcus Aurelius

The View from Above

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Marcus Aurelius frequently employs a meditative technique that modern psychologists have taken to calling the "view from above" — a deliberate broadening of perspective designed to dissolve the apparent importance of immediate concerns.

Cosmic Perspective

Look down, Marcus instructs himself, from the highest point you can imagine. See the vast sweep of human history, the generations that came before and will come after. The ambitions that seem all-consuming shrink to nothing. The insults that sting fade into inconsequence. Even empires, viewed from sufficient height, vanish like smoke.

Confine yourself to the present. Alexander the Great and his mule driver both died and the same thing happened to both.
Against Anxiety

This is not nihilism. Marcus is not saying nothing matters. He is saying that our anxious grip on outcomes — on what others think, on winning and losing — is disproportionate. Virtue and rational action matter. The rest can be released.

The view from above bears comparison to the Buddhist practice of contemplating impermanence. Both traditions use the same cognitive move — zooming out — to loosen attachment and cultivate equanimity.

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