April
27, 20XX
My Dear Lucilius:
I am pleased – indeed, entirely overwhelmed – at receiving this communication from you after, what has it been now? A year? Two? Time, as I am sure you can understand, flows much different now than it did before. A great deal of it has to do with my somewhat rushed withdrawal from the world of regular employment - the seasons and indeed perhaps the months are within my grasp but not so often the days. No longer having the press of a work week upon me, my life has returned to a rhythm of seasonality that serves it well.
I am pleased – indeed, entirely overwhelmed – at receiving this communication from you after, what has it been now? A year? Two? Time, as I am sure you can understand, flows much different now than it did before. A great deal of it has to do with my somewhat rushed withdrawal from the world of regular employment - the seasons and indeed perhaps the months are within my grasp but not so often the days. No longer having the press of a work week upon me, my life has returned to a rhythm of seasonality that serves it well.
I
had hoped you would respond to my missive – and yes, even in this
“backwater”, as you term it, we still have access to the greater
wide world. Not as quickly as you would enjoy or desire, of course,
but enough for me.
I
quite agree with you that the visit I had to which I had referred –
that rather confused young woman from the Industrial-Government
Cooperation Council – was more jarring to me than I care to admit.
That is part of the reason that I reached out to you and others.
Sadly, you seem to be the only one who responded to me. That someone
was willing to take time and treasure to drive to a small town in the
middle of nowhere on the slim hope of convincing a man some years
retired to re-enter the labor force suggests that either there is a
high degree of efficiency currently in operation in the government –
something I have not really seen in all my years – or that
desperation is finally starting to take hold.
I
am sure you find my concerns slightly overplayed – as you put it,
for forty plus years I have looked for the ending of the world and it
has yet to arrive. That said, your response convinces me that
something is afoot – indeed, if you are concerned, surely I have
great reason to be so!
I
have not followed the international scene as much as you have,
judging from your questions – my interests have become far more
local and practical, with the exception of the economy, something
even a gainfully retired person takes a great deal of interest in.
Even domestic politics have become much less of a concern than they
once were, as I seem to have little enough of a voice to use in the
modern era and a rather healthy interest in remaining as invisible
and unremarkable as possible.
You
may wonder that I address this letter to you as Lucilius. There is
still some wisdom in being as anonymous as possible – after all,
one no longer knows who and who is not viewing these sorts of things
and I would just as soon have neither of us identified, or at least
make someone work very hard to do it. So in the fashion of Letters
to a Stoic we shall correspond, you and I, as did Seneca and his
friend Lucilius – not on matters of Stoicism of a former age but
rather on life in the changed age in which we live.
I
look forward to the conversation, my friend. Be well.
-
Seneca
Apropo to today.
ReplyDeleteThe spell of the story teller. I thought I was too old for it. :)
ReplyDeleteThanks Linda!
ReplyDeleteAww. Thanks Glen!
ReplyDelete