May 29, 2026
Non nobis solum nati sumus ortusque nostri partem patria vindicat, partem amici.
Cicero wrote this in 44 BC, the year Julius Caesar was assassinated and Rome was sliding toward civil war. He was in his sixties, politically sidelined, and had recently lost his daughter Tullia. He kept writing anyway, producing some of his most important work while the world fell apart around him. The line — "We are not born for ourselves alone; our country claims a share of our origin, our friends claim a share" — cuts to the heart of what makes a life feel worth living: it is not private satisfaction but contribution to something outside yourself.
Reflection
Think about the work or relationships that actually take up your time right now. Which of them exist mainly for your benefit, and which genuinely serve someone else?
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