A long time ago, smart people believed everything in the universe could be broken down into four essences. Fire, air, water, and earth. Alchemists believed that they could combine these things in the right ways to make gold.
As silly as it seems now, those ideas were conceptually accurate. Now, instead of four essences, we have a periodic table of elements. We have split the atom. People can build complex materials using nothing but a whiteboard and a chemistry set. And many of those materials helped us fly to the moon.
But back then, people believed and taught a more primitive idea. In addition to the four essences, ancient philosophers believed there was a quintessence — a fifth essence that unites those four.
Today, we still use the words, even if their original meanings have matured into irrelevance. Quintessence, having shed its metaphysical origins, now represents a perfect, refined extract, the premier example of something.
Some people believe there is nothing eternal, and therefore by extension, there is no moral reason to cultivate quintessential values. What makes a person want to do good is based on simple human desire and the force of will. Other people believe that they can receive divine blessings and favor through virtuous living.
When we evaluate ourselves or the world around us, what quintessence do we find?What is the mortar of our hearts made from? Upon a critical review, does the final product have integrity, or does it easily decay? When we reduce down our life and examine its refined extract, do we see something valuable and precious? Or are we left with ashes and dust?
Perhaps a diligent life of principle isn’t just fitting for gurus and saints. Maybe it is a path of enrichment and enlightenment for all who seek. Maybe the power to improve our lives and the world around us is as accessible to us as mere thought. As thought gives way to attitude, and attitude motivates a behavior, and a behavior becomes a habit, maybe that end result is something precious.
If a heart of gold can be rendered by mere thought, then maybe the alchemists were right after all.