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Per aspera ad astra: the secret of value

“Per aspera ad astra” (through hardship to the stars), just a few Latin words that contain a whole world: the promise that the stars—symbols of immortality, glory, and success—can only be reached by passing through hardships, effort, and pain. Seneca expressed it clearly: non est ad astra mollis e terris via (“there is no easy way from earth to the stars”).

It was not an isolated thought. The Greeks had already carved the same idea into their language. Hesiod, in Works and Days, warned:

ἀρετὴν δὲ θεοὶ θνητοῖσιν ἔθηκαν ἔργων ἔνι
“The gods have placed excellence (areté) within hard work.”

And Pindar added:

ἄτερ πόνου δὲ θνατοῖς θεοὶ δίδοσιν οὐδέν
“Without toil the gods grant nothing to mortals.”

For the Greeks, the reward was kleos, the glory that lives on in human memory. For the Romans, it was the astra, the stars where the hero was lifted in apotheosis. Two different languages to say the same thing: nothing precious comes without effort.

Value lies in effort

Think about it: what sense is there in spending weeks assembling a 5,000-piece puzzle when you could hang up a ready-made poster? Or in climbing a mountain step by step, sweat pouring into your eyes, when there is a cable car?

The sense is this: value is not in the final object, but in the road taken. A puzzle “matters” because of the hours of patience and focus. A summit reached on foot matters infinitely more because every step was earned.

Conversely, what comes easily is worth little: we take it for granted. Only those who have almost lost their sight know the miracle of regaining it. Only those who had to learn to walk again after an accident know the true value of every step.

Scarcity creates value

The ancients knew this well. A bottle of water in the city is not worth the same as in the desert. Often, value is artificially increased by making something harder to obtain. Modern marketing thrives on this: “limited editions,” exclusives, endless waiting lists. Ancient secret societies and initiation rites worked the same way: the harder the trials, the greater the sense of belonging.

The things you cannot buy

We live in a world where everything seems purchasable. But the most important things escape that logic. You can buy the most expensive piano, but not the daily discipline to learn how to play it. You can hire a personal trainer, but not the effort your muscles must endure. You can download apps for languages, but not the courage to make mistakes a hundred times until your ear adjusts.

The list goes on: an athletic body, authentic relationships, wisdom gained from lived experience… All belong to the realm of per aspera, not of “fast and easy.”

A Mediterranean philosophy

What’s beautiful is that Mediterranean peoples were not puritans or obsessed with sacrifice for its own sake. They did not see hardship as a curse but as a necessary condition to earn the right to celebrate under the stars. Struggle gave value to the achievement, and the achievement gave meaning to the feast.

This is why the lesson of per aspera ad astra is still alive today: in a world that promises “everything, easy and instant,” the ancients remind us that true value lies in the difficult path, in the trials overcome, in the person we become along the way.

So next time you face an obstacle, don’t ask “why me?” but rather: “what star awaits me beyond this hardship?”

by Brunus

The book is now available on Amazon

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