rockcampbell.com/content/posts/power-over-mind.md

3.1 KiB
Raw Blame History

title date draft slug tags categories description
You Have Power Over Your Mind 2025-09-28T06:00:00 false you-have-power-over-your-mind
Stoicism
Marcus Aurelius
Mindset
Essays
Marcus Aureliuss reminder that real strength comes from mastering your own judgments, choices, and attitude.

“You have power over your mind—not outside events. Realize this, and you will find strength.” — Marcus Aurelius

Marcus Aurelius wrote those words in Meditations nearly two thousand years ago, but they strike just as hard today. The emperor wasnt giving some abstract lesson from a throne; he was reminding himself, in the middle of war and politics, that control is an illusion outside the walls of our own mind. The only real power we hold is over our judgments, our choices, and our attitudes.

Whats in Our Control

The Stoics were drawing a line between whats “up to us” and whats not. It sounds simple, almost too simple, until you actually try it.

  • The weather? Not up to us.
  • What people think of us? Not up to us.
  • Fortune, fate, chance, the economy, the score of the game? Not up to us.

But our reaction to those things? Thats in our domain—thats where our free will comes into play. We dont get to stop the storm, but we do get to decide if well curse the rain or plant the seed.

The Strength of Restraint

When Marcus says well “find strength,” he isnt talking about brute force or pushing people around. Hes pointing to the kind of strength that cant be taken away: resilience, composure, clarity. The strength to hold your ground when life tilts sideways. The strength to laugh when insulted, to stay calm when provoked, to be steady when everyone else is losing their footing.

Thats a deeper strength than muscles or titles. Its a kind of inner fortress.

How It Shows Up Today

Think about modern life:

  • You cant control what your boss dumps on your desk, but you can control how you approach the work.
  • You cant control if the market crashes, but you can control whether you panic or hold steady.
  • You cant control if someone cuts you off in traffic, but you can control whether you let it ruin your mood for the next hour.

Thats Marcuss message in motion: freedom through focus on whats yours to command.

A Hard but Worthwhile Practice

Of course, its not easy. Knowing something and living it are two different things. The temptation is always to try to wrestle with the world, to force outcomes, to stew over what others think. Marcus knew this—thats why he had to keep reminding himself.

Strength comes in practicing that separation, day after day. Some days youll nail it, some days youll slip. But every time you step back and remind yourself, “This part is mine, that part is not,” youre building the muscle of resilience.

Closing Thought

We spend so much of life trying to control what we cant. Marcus Aurelius points us back to the only battlefield we can actually win: our own mind. Master that, and the storms of life lose their power.

Thats real strength.