Ten Percent Happier with Dan Harris - 382: Stoicism 101 | Nancy Sherman
Episode Date: September 27, 2021You may have heard about stoicism, in the common parlance, as having a stiff upper lip, sucking it up, grinning and bearing it, suppressing your emotions, etcetera. Or you may have heard of S...toicism, the ancient Greco-Roman philosophy, that has become the de rigeur set of life hacks among millennial self-optimizers. In this episode, guest Nancy Sherman argues that Stoicism is way deeper than any of that. She will argue that, in fact, Stoicism is kind of the opposite of all the above. It’s a way to truly know your patterns of thought and emotion. Nancy is a Professor of Philosophy at Georgetown University. She is an expert in ethics, the history of moral philosophy, moral psychology, military ethics, and emotions. Her most recent book is called Stoic Wisdom: Ancient Lessons for Modern Resilience. In this conversation we cover the basics of Stoicism, how and why capital “S” Stoicism is often misinterpreted, a meditation practice called “premeditation of evils” (which is far more practical than it may sound), and another practice designed to make you feel “at home in the world." Please note: This interview includes a brief reference to suicide. Download the Ten Percent Happier app today: https://10percenthappier.app.link/install Full Shownotes: https://www.tenpercent.com/podcast-episode/nancy-sherman-382 See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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From ABC, this is the 10% happier podcast.
I'm Dan Harris.
Hey gang, you may have heard about stoicism in the common parlance as having a stiff upper
lip sucking it up, grinning and bearing it, suppressing your emotions,
et cetera. You may have also heard of stoicism, the capital S, the ancient Greco-Roman philosophy
that has become the doerigur set of life hacks among millennial self-optimizers.
My guest today is here to argue convincingly, in my opinion, that stoicism is way deeper than any of that.
She will argue, in fact, that stoicism is kind of the opposite of all of the above.
It's a way to truly know your patterns of thought and emotion.
The stoics, she says, were sort of early cognitive behavioral therapists.
They even developed a whole set of meditations designed to help people handle worst-case scenarios,
shave down their egos, and develop a sense of connection to the universe.
All of which she is now going to teach us how to do.
She, by the way, is Nancy Sherman.
She's a professor of philosophy at Georgetown University and expert in ethics, the history of moral philosophy, moral psychology, military ethics, and
of moral philosophy, moral psychology, military ethics, and emotions. Her most recent book is called Stoic Wisdom, Ancient Lessons for Modern Resilience. In this conversation, we covered the
basics of stoicism. How and why capital S stoicism is often misinterpreted these days. A meditation
practice called premeditation of evils, which is far more practical than a may sound, and
another practice designed to make you feel, quote, at home in the world.
One brief heads up, there is a very quick reference in this conversation to suicide.
Before we dive in with Nancy, one item of business.
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Okay, here we go now with Nancy Sherman.
Nancy Sherman, welcome to the show.
Thanks so much, Dan, pleasure to be here.
My memory is not the best, or is my wife sometimes describes me
I'm an unreliable historian, but to my memory,
we have not done one show on stoicism.
Certainly, we have not dedicated an entire episode to it,
which is probably a big mistake,
but we're making up for it now, I hope. And I will say that I know next to nothing about stoicism. So let me ask
an incredibly embarrassingly basic question, which is what is stoicism?
Well, it's a good question to start with. So, stoicism is an ancient Greco-Roman philosophy.
So we all know Socrates' a Aristotle or the classical philosophers.
The Stoics came after, sort of they follow after Aristotle, and they are both Greek and Roman,
Hellenization spread out, and so Stoicism became a philosophy for how to deal with our vulnerability,
the fact that there are accidents, that there's bad stuff that
happens. We're talking about one of the guys, Seneca, who is the spin doctor and speech
writer for Nero. If you say the wrong things, you get asked to commit suicide early on in
your career. But it was also times of enslavement as well as times of imperial luxury.
So people were trying to deal with having a lot too much, you know, egos exploding and
also having very little.
And how do you temper yourself?
How do you find calm?
So some of it, it's about finding calm in a world of uncertainty, which really appeals
to us now.
I, as ancient philosopher, classical philosopher,
have to remind people, it's about virtue, it's about being good and being good
in a world where we're connected globally. They're the first cosmopolitan. They really believed in
that word, cosmopolitan citizen of the cosmos or the universe. That's where it came from.
a citizen of the cosmos or the universe. That's where it came from. So what appeals to many is this idea of finding common a storm, of being the master of your
ship, the captain of your ship. But sometimes people think of it only as an internal story
and not about how you are in the world with each other, how you become resilient through
social supports.
So that's the piece I'm always trying to emphasize.
Well, we'll get into that in a big way,
but I'm just trying to compute how what you just described,
vulnerability and virtue,
squares with the common usage of stoicism or stoic as sucking it up or showing no emotion in the face of
adversity. So however that came to be, maybe through the British and Victorian stuff, or I worked
with the military for so many years, suck it up and truck on, is their mantra. That is as
element of stoicism, the idea of having really strong will and being tough no matter what.
But the Stoics were also these amazing emotion theorists. They knew more about the emotions
than most people know today. We were sort of our early cognitive behavioral therapist
in a way.
And so they were figuring out all the ways that we feel
and all the ways that sometimes our emotions run away
from us.
They are too strong.
So they are about tempering your emotions,
but they're not about getting rid of them
or sucking it up at all costs.
The portrait we often get is a kind of self-reliance.
Go at a lone grit.
You know, tough it out no matter what.
That isn't it. They're about connecting.
One of the most moving passages I know is from Marcus Aurelius.
So he's the emperor. He's on a battlefield.
He's seeing limbs strewn around.
When I talk to soldiers, I think of this a lot.
They're body parts.
And he's saying, if you've ever seen an arm or a leg separated
from the trunk of the body, that's what we make of ourselves
when we cut ourselves off from each other.
So there's this social glue, and you can't be tough without being attached somehow, but
you have to figure out a certain kind of balance so that if crap happens, you still have
some equilibrium and some inner resources as well as an ability to know where to turn,
to turn to others and have cultivated those friendships
and attachments, including family
and all the communities we live in.
So you're right, it isn't the common story,
which is typically tough it out at all costs
and don't ask for help. That is really a
misreading of stoicism and I think it's a really dangerous one if that's the
message that's out there. I mean there are potentially a few misreading.
There's the way stoic is used in the common parlance if you I haven't looked
it up in the dictionary but I little S. Yeah, little S, small S, yes, yeah, which is showing no emotion in the face of adversity
or something to that effect, I think. And then there's what's seen, I haven't run the numbers
on this, but my just by observing, there seems to be a pretty robust embrace of capital S,
stoicism, in particular among sort of self-optimizing young men men. I haven't looked at this closely,
and I think you have,
are you seeing that some people
are really leaning into the suck it up,
ethos of it, and not looking enough at virtue and vulnerability?
Absolutely. So leaning in is a good phrase.
Yeah, they are leaning into your man,
a view of manliness, and there's
all often misogyny in there. Tough at all, it costs. It's almost the stoic
military culture gets writ large over a general culture. Some of it Silicon
Valley has something to do with it. You're in tough circumstances. You got to
get the angel investment next week. The numbers have to run clearly. Your jack Dorsey and stuff is happening, you know,
that you don't like, whether it's through Twitter or Square. And you need to find quiet and calm.
And so you sort of do it on your own or you take ice baths. That's one of his things or you walk,
you walk outside without coats.
So the idea is you can handle no matter what adversity
comes your way.
That really isn't the stoic story.
The stoic story is that you can't do it on your own,
and you've always got to think of a cooperative endeavor.
So you're right, virtue gets sideline
for inner strength at all costs and also a kind of
connectivity gets sideline for there's no challenge that isn't one that you can handle. The idea
of kind of mental discipline that matches athletic discipline. Now the Stoics have a lot of that.
There's a lot of talk about being in the gym and
there's no adversity that you can't handle, but they have so many other
strands that get sidelined by the idea of
handling any circumstance that comes your way. I have to just add, you know, they're coming out of a tradition of tragedy,
the Greek tragedy, you know, horrible things happen.
You lose your kids, you have to sacrifice the kid in order to set sail for the Trojan War if you're Agamemnon.
So the Greeks and Romans know tragedy big time. And so they can't be forgetting it.
They're just trying to figure out how to deal deal with it and how do I deal with it
while still being in a community.
So, like anything, people pick up stuff that they want to hear and you're right.
The manus fears that sometimes called can get pretty ugly and toxic.
Manus fear.
I want to be clear that when I talked about self-optimizing young men,
I didn't mean to denigrate them other than the young part.
It pretty much describes me.
I'm just so interested.
One of the reasons why I wanted to have you won is that you really emphasize the parts
of stoicism that seem to have been shunted aside or given short shrift when put through
the filter of Western individualism.
We sort of like the do it on your own, don't show any emotions.
I guess it's not just Western individualism, it's problematic masculinity in combination
with Western individualism.
Yeah, I think that's probably right.
There's the Ken Doe aspect and there's kind of self-reliance theme that goes
through the uptake of stoicism. But what's really sort of fascinating is ancient
stoicism came into being around the time of the Judeo-Christian birth in a
certain way. And so some of it sounds very familiar to us. We're all children of
God. They would say children of Zeus.
But we're all in the cosmos.
We share humanity.
We share humanity and virtue of having common reason.
I mean, this is also enlightenment philosophy, right?
It's our founding fathers of American constitution,
Jefferson, Washington, all read this stuff.
It was nighttime reading. So they've got this
bigger picture in mind. In addition to self-reliance, they've got a picture of how do you build
a world of shared humanity? And so that doesn't get picked up. I mean, self-optimizing is
a good way of putting it
in the idea of what's the best flourishing life for me.
The Greeks and Romans never talked about for me.
They talked about for us.
They were always thinking, you know, if you're Greek,
the small city state, you know, it's Athens.
As soon as Athens started getting big and the
Romans came along with an empire, it's a bigger world, it's almost the whole
world. So they've got to figure out how to connect everyone and they have to
figure out how to connect everyone through shared discourse, through reason,
shared emotions, and also a sense that we're all vulnerable, and we got to use
each other as supports for helping ourselves get through it.
So the idea of kind of maximizing your potential, not quite sure that's a very ancient idea.
I'm going to ask another maybe embarrassingly basic question.
We talk a lot in the show about Buddhism.
I understand to a certain extent what Buddhism is and how you do it.
You've just described a little bit what stoicism is.
I'm curious how do you do stoicism?
How do you operationalize this wisdom in your life?
It's a great question and no one need to be embarrassed.
Part of their appeal is that they have practices,
and some of the practices are meditations.
And the meditations aren't like eastern meditations
of quieting all the babble in your mind.
But they're rather discursive, like talking through it.
So, you know, Freud, no surprise, is a kind of Western psychotherapist in the model of
the ancient, so almost.
So some of it is that at the end of the day, you keep a notebook in the quiet of the
night, says, Sennaka, when my wife says, sleep, he says, And I think about things that really got me angry
or afraid or got the better of me.
Someone's really silly.
Like he yelled at a member of his household
for dropping a crystal goblet.
Or he wasn't seated at the dais
where he thought he should be at the head table
where all the important
people were. He was put in the back of the room.
Or another one is that he should have been led into a house. The dormant didn't let
him into the house. He's an important person. So, yeah, his ego was offended. He got
disc, she might say. And he's trying to temper his expectations so that in the morning he keeps some of this stuff
in mind.
So, that's one thing, meditations at the end of the day.
Another one, which is really, I think, important.
I ran through this with my mother in a certain way.
It's called pre-rehearsal of evils.
It's a horrible phrase, but pre-rehearsal of bads.
Yet, it dwell in the future.
You anticipate things that could happen that could unmoor you.
My mother hated to talk about death.
Here she was 97 and a nursing home.
And she'd smile when I came in.
She read about three novels a week, but death wasn't on her plate.
So I said, Mom, did we sign up for the immortality
plan? When we put you in the Hebrew home, we put you there, or remind me, because if we
did, it's going to be really expensive. Well, this got a big rise out of her, and it became
our secret way of talking about the future and a future
she clearly dreaded. So rehearsing your mortality is a big theme in stoicism and you know that's
like the ultimate for many people. How do you deal with leaving this world in your family?
So I think it became in our, a kind of shared dance.
We would have this little joke.
Did we sign up for the mortality plan?
It was a way of stepping into a dreaded future.
And we made it less toxic.
That's a very stoic tool.
Pre-reverse the future.
And especially future outcomes, you don't wanna happen.
Tim Ferriss talks about fear setting.
They have you set your fears a little bit
by anticipating them.
And another thing they have is hedge your bets.
It's called mental reservation.
When you start thinking of things you want to have,
you always have to be adaptive and resilient
through being agile.
So when you start to think about your plans,
like, you know, will my book be a great success?
You maybe it won't.
You always sort of have this, maybe it won't.
You kind of have this clause that you stick in
if things work out, but they may not.
And so they're always trying to get you to think in advance about how to be flexible.
And I think that really is for my life.
It's so important.
You know, I have grown kids, I have grandkids.
I can't control their lives at this point.
They're terribly successful, you know, by all metrics, but they don't always do what I want
them to do.
And I got to kind of always sort of say, well, maybe it won't be exactly like that.
Very stoic.
Doesn't sound stoic, right?
It doesn't sound like tough at out.
Take on any challenge, get on the mat
with the hardest opponent.
No, it's just like you against yourself
trying to figure out what are some of the demons you have to face and are they as bad as they might be other.
I want to go back to these meditation practices because I think this is going to be of interest to this audience, many of whom are meditators.
You kind of touched on three different practices there, but I'd love to go back and dive a little bit more deeply into each one of them.
and dive a little bit more deeply into each one of them. So the first was, you described Seneca, one of the preeminent stoic philosophers at the end of the day after his wife had gone
to sleep, running through all of the ego bruises he suffered during the day. Can you just walk
us through how we might practice this in our own lives?
Sure. His list looks just like things we might be up against at the end of the day.
Were you slided by someone who you thought owed you a bit more respect? It could have all
sorts of tones. In my classroom, it could be graduate students that I want to have respect
me more than I think they are, or it could be my kids who I think said something
that was hurtful and that bruised me a bit.
And I could start writing a letter to them,
or an email or a text, but I have to hold myself back.
And I sort of think, so what was in it for me?
Why was I so invested in this? The stocks are
very big on sticky attachments. You know, my phrase, but it's a quizzidiveness where it's
got to work out the way I want it to work out. And I want to think about it that way and
that way alone. And I'm invested in this particular outcome or this
particular way I want to see things go. In the background of this meditation
practice is that the things out there, they use a word that doesn't read well for
us in difference, but it really means they don't really change the balance of
your happiness.
You gotta learn how to approach and avoid
without all of that equisitiveness that we have
or outright fear.
So yeah, be cautious, wearily cautious,
and yeah, invest in things so they matter,
but don't invest in it so that it's the be all and end all.
That's very healthy. I mean, that's healthy no matter what psychotherapy you believe in, I think.
And so they ask you to run through your day a little bit like that. And in my case, it's typically family members who, you know, I am the most invested in my immediate circle.
I am the most invested in my immediate circle. And was there a remark there or a friend
who's sort of had enough the cuff remark
that just rubbed me the wrong way?
Why?
Let go a little bit.
So we would say in an Eastern meditation, let go.
Quiet your mind of that.
They don't have that language,
because remember this is Greek and Roman philosophy.
They're all about discourse and chatter and reason.
So they asked you to think about it.
I'd say more in an older school western psychotherapy way, you know, put words to it and think
about why it's a narcissistic bruise. And some of them are so mundane,
like you weren't the guest of honor at the banquet,
but you were put in the rear of a banquet hall.
I find that extremely useful.
And if you're a diary writer at the end of the day,
you do meditation through writing in a diary,
as many of us do, it's meant to carry over to the morning.
Not keep you awake. That's hard. It could easily keep you awake if you know on it and get
anguished over it. But the idea is that it would release you a little bit from a poor way of thinking
about it or from the mis-evaluations.
They think we really falsely evaluate a lot of stuff.
You know, we have the wrong estimates of things.
We overestimate our reputation.
We overestimate our ability to earn money to be rich.
We overestimate that you want to live forever
and make a huge impact on the world.
And they go on. These are just the opposite of a kind of more ascetic lifestyle.
And they're in that world. They are so in that world. They're in the height of almost
decadent Rome at times. You know, they're into power, politics, fame, and fortune. And so it's all
the more appealing to them to figure out how to deal
with those demons in a certain way that are so interesting. And I think it's different from
Eastern meditation because it's chate and talkative. But on the other hand, it gets at some of the real,
I'd say bad values in many cases. Money is great, but just to accumulate it without
helping the world become a better place. Eh, I wouldn't go for that. Military strength, real
courage is great, but just to be daring and just be able to be a parachuter and jump out of things
or be a seal, you know, and just so that you can endure under any conditions
no matter how tough they are, not great unless it's aimed at something other than your own strength,
a cause that you really think is worth it. So that's what they're asking you to think about.
I like this a lot, and you have said a couple times that it's not meditation in the eastern sense.
I think that's true to a large extent.
And slash, but I would say that if you look at the word that the early Buddhists used for meditation,
it was, I believe, and people can send me a note on Twitter from totally wrong about this.
But I believe the word that was used was bovana. And that word translates roughly into cultivation. And so what
we're doing in meditation is cultivating mental skills. And what I'm hearing here is that at the end
of the day, either through journaling or you're just lying in your bed and we're sitting on a
meditation cushion and running through the parts of the day where you got your ego bruised, you got attached that this has the benefit
of surfacing the what you call sticky attachments, the psychic crampons on the rock face of life
where we're just holding on to things inappropriately in a way that just blocks our ability to be
maximally effective, that this can have the salutary effect over time
of getting us to let go of stuff that doesn't matter.
I think incredibly so.
I mean, I've fought a lot more about
how do I distance myself,
put space between all the things that I know matter in my life,
having healthy children, a healthy grandchildren, a good marriage,
a philosophy department that I love and really respect working in,
colleagues. And what would happen if some of that kind of fell apart a bit
through illness or things not necessarily in my control.
How would I adjust a little bit?
Some of it is am I over investing in stuff I can't control.
A lot of the narcissistic injuries come from outside,
not all, but many of them come from overestimating
the way that those things matter.
Like, length of life may not matter as much as the quality
of the everyday.
That my kids do the things I want them to do in this order
and hitting these goals, that really doesn't matter
as much as that they're good people and flourishing.
That sort of thing.
So I think the Greeks and Romans are all about thinking
of life as a whole.
They're not about every single individual action.
It's about flourishing life for us together as a whole.
That's a really important thing to do.
That's like the birds I perspective on the whole thing.
And I think coming away without those
a quizative attachments and all the grandpa
and stuck on the rock face,
that's a great phrase,
is a way of looking a little bit more broadly
at what matters.
It's also though value checks.
Am I really valuing the right things?
That is critical.
Am I investing in the right things?
Am I going just for more zeros after the dollar sign? Or am I going for,
that's a good person. I like this community because we do good things. And that's why I'm part of
this community. I've thought about this a lot lately because I think of who's very stoic in my
world. And a lot of them are military guys. But they're not always stoic for the right reasons.
They do all the social outreach,
but they always think that what matters
is their courage at all costs straight.
I will never break.
I will be bulletproof and I can do whatever is asked of me.
And that's the measure.
Well, that's not the measure.
And so if they are hard on themselves
because they think they have to be bulletproof,
that's another place where you would check yourself
in journaling, do I think I'm invincible?
You'd be surprised how many people think they're invincible
or a popular term these days, antifragile.
Who's antifragile?
Who's invulnerable eyes?
But we like to think of ourselves as never breaking, especially in public.
And the Stoics.
We dispute that. They would just spute the idea that you're invincible.
They're trying to help you deal with vulnerability, but they're not trying to make you invulnerable.
We all wanna deal with invulnerability.
I don't know who doesn't.
You show up at your doctor's appointment
and all of a sudden the blood work comes in
and doesn't look so good.
And that's crushing.
You get the news.
Well, what's the next step?
How am I gonna adjust to this?
Or I thought I had a classroom that felt safe for everyone, but maybe it doesn't.
You're teaching on Zoom and you get everyone in their bedrooms, closets, open other people
with four-posted beds and fluffy things all around.
You see all the difference.
You've got to make it comfortable for everyone. And that's a challenge. It's being reflective. Now, I will say the downside of being overly reflective
is it could keep you awake at night. So you can't beat up on yourself. And so that's the fine line,
we have to find between wanting to be good and being good to yourself.
So, anyway, I think about that a lot because it's very easy to get a bit neurotic about
all these challenges to become a better person.
How do you personally walk that line in light of your study of stoicism?
I think I try to mix it a little bit with the eastern idea of quieting my head.
I meditate in the morning. But with the eastern idea of quieting my head,
I meditate in the morning.
I don't talk to myself, or if I catch myself talking to myself,
I try to stop being so litigious through mantras or the like.
And I often think in a journaling way
that I definitely try to think what values matter the most to me.
And which ones are superhold overs of stuff that I really can let go of.
I think as you get older, it's a little easier.
You know, you're not on the path of my careers got to go this way.
And if I don't make these next steps and whatever ladder you're on,
blunk, that's that. I don't think I have that same push.
So I think if you do, you have to keep asking yourself,
which values are you going for?
And which ones should you sort of think
are a little bit more, I don't know.
It's a horrible word indifferent
because we already say indifference like apathetic.
But what they mean is figure out how to select health, disselect bad habits or disease,
but don't get so hooked on health that if you get some bad news, it's the end.
You're done in, You can't let go. I think of it as the right kind of almost sort of
like behavior modification approach and be wearily cautious in avoiding but don't cling,
you know, cling so that you can't let go.
It reminds me of how the Buddhists use words like dispassion, non-attachment, disenchantment in a positive way.
Yes, I think there's a lot of similarity. You know, in a future book, I actually want to join
up with a colleague and think about this. I've practiced Buddhist meditation for a long time
and have read a lot of sutras and also secondary sources. And there's a lot there. They do have this sense of selflessness.
It's just not Greek and Roman or stoic. So the stoics think of, you don't disappear. Your reason
is what's going to be your guide in life. They're Western philosophers in that regard. And in a tradition of thinking about how to make the world a better place through your
reason in conjunction with others, a kind of commonwealth of reason.
Cosmopolitanism really is about all of us together in cooperative rational endeavors.
I don't think of that as particularly Buddhist.
I may be mistaken on that.
I think of the idea of kind of disappearing a bit in meditation so that you become less
important in the flow of things or as a student of Greek philosophy.
There's always the best part of your psyche is reason, whether it shows up in your emotions through kind of emotional
intelligence and smart emotions, or it shows up in being credential, or it shows up in
being plamful, or as we were saying before, rehearsing some of these bad things you don't
want to happen, but thinking about them dwelling in the future. So you're always really engaged with your mind.
There's a lot of mental effort that goes into being a stoic.
And someways I think of retreats and silent retreats
as ways of really tempering down some of the heavy mental lifting.
I might be wrong about this.
I don't know enough to say whether you're wrong or right,
but I mean, intrigued by this thing you said about,
you know, in Buddhism, there's selflessness,
which is an extremely difficult concept to grok.
It essentially, actually essentially is the wrong word
to use because the argument is that we have no essence.
That yes, on some level, Nancy Sherman exists.
I can see you on my computer right now, and our listeners can hear your voice on some
very obvious level.
You Nancy exist.
However, if you close your eyes and look for some core nugget of nanciness, you won't
find it.
The analogy that sometimes gets made is, you can look at a chair.
That chair exists.
You can trust that you can sit in it.
But if you took a high-powered microscope, you'd see that there is no essence of chair
there.
It's all spinning subatomic particles.
And so yes, as I understand it, Western philosophy doesn't go there either intellectually or
experientially because that's the key part of Eastern practices as they really takes
you to this essencelessness, this selflessness experientially.
But what's the practical ramifications?
Well, one of them, as far as I understand it, one of the practical ramifications of seeing
that you don't have a self in the way you thought you did
Is that then you're a better player in the broader community and that exists in a prominent way in
Stoicism and so I'm wondering whether on some level the Stoics are reasoning themselves toward
The same or at least one of the key
Outcomes that the Buddhists would have us experience ourselves toward.
I think that's absolutely the case. Metaphysics is a side of who we are and whether we exist because
of our essence or the essence is there because we exist. They are the first to really talk about a cosmic city,
a global city, a way in which,
now here's a bit of an essence,
because of our reason, we all are players in the same world.
Yeah, they have trouble, of course,
with their social conventions, they believe in enslavement,
they have more servants than Downton Abbey would have, it makes Downton Abbey look shabby, but they think that we all
can contribute in some way, and that the world works more smoothly if we think of ourselves as in
world works more smoothly if we think of ourselves as in the use sort of Plato's term, a republic.
By the way, it includes women.
Women get educated on the stoic view because they have reason and have the potential for
virtue just like men.
They also think in terms of holes, which sounds a little bit like the Buddhist story, that you're part of a hole.
You're part of a breathing hole.
They talk about breath.
Pnuma, our word for pneumonia, P-N-E-U,
is their word for breath, and it's what your psyche is,
filled with breath.
And we all share that breath, which sounds a little Eastern almost.
We share kind of cosmic breath, and we share it with God.
So they have an idea that the universe has some divine element in it as well.
But that said, we're all neighbors.
Marcus really uses a wonderful phrase, we're co-workers, we're fellow workers, even when
we're asleep. We're contributing to this larger
whole.
And that's a very important idea of diminishing a bit the importance of yourself, reducing
your ego investment, and thinking about what's shared across all spheres and they have practices for doing this. They call it
becoming at home in the world and you take circles and you think of you at the center,
but you at the center have these concentric circles around you and you think about the farthest circle, and you bring through vivid imagination
that outermost circle closer to your center, and they say it takes zealous effort. So it's a
real practice, a discipline, a habit, and you imagine someone in the farthest reaches, who might be brought closer to you in the way that your
Kiffin kin would be, your kinsman, your family, and you have to practice that regularly.
The connection is an automatic. It's not magical. It actually requires quite a lot of practice
and effort. So this idea of you're nothing if you cut yourself off from the hole, which
was at Marcus Aurelius, the stoic emperors thinking on the battlefield, comes with a way of
making the connection more vivid for yourself through this practice of bringing out our circles
closer to the center. Now there's a hazard for any of philosophy and that is you make the outer circles in
your image, you know, whatever is me is enlarged for everyone. We get very narcissistic about how we
want the big picture to look. But they're essentially saying make it matter, bring those outer
circles inward. And their athletes of the psyche is the best way to put it.
They really believe in discipline for your mental training. And it's not doing a lot of
logical exercises. It's rather doing these rehearsals. What are you anticipating that you think
you're overattached to? Let it go a little bit. Meditate at the end of the day. Imagine the world of which you're a part
that you're a global citizen. How would that work? Back to the question, is there a big ego in the
center of stoicism? Well, yeah, in the sense that they never diminish your reasoning capacity. You
need it to get smart emotions. They have all these trainings. You also need
it to monitor your bias. I think this is a totally ignored part of stoicism. They have
this idea that your interpreters of the world, that's one of the practices. You always have
to remember you interpret the world. And so, you know, maybe the misfortune isn't as bad as you thought, but then they say, make sure you
watch the impressions.
And this could be also your biases.
Watch the biases and press a pause button, you know, phrase of condiment and condiment,
so that you can think more slowly rather than just fast, be more reflective.
And practice putting some space between impulsive
impressions and your spin on them.
And are your spins, whether it has to do with how you view
people in the farthest reaches of the world
who have little connection to you,
versus how you deal with what you want and need
and what gets you really pissed off and what gets you angry, put some space in between those
impressions and your estimate of them. Much more of my conversation with Nancy Sherman right after this.
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So there are a bunch of practices I want to make sure that we get back to and get more granular run.
A while back, many, many minutes ago, you listed three practices, and then I said at the
time, let's go deep on each one.
We've only gone deep on one of them.
So we'll come back to the remaining two of those in a minute, but you then went on to
list two other practices, the circles practice,
which I also want to talk about, and you referenced this practice that can help us shave down our
biases. Can you just say a little bit more about how exactly we would do that in a stoic fashion?
So the stoics have this idea that, if all this stuff coming in and they call them impressions,
If all this stuff coming in and they call them impressions and many of those impressions are really fast
Impulsive is their word they call them impulsive impressions and
Part of the attraction to stoicism is they put so much
attention on your effort
your will your discipline and
So they think that if you can, it's a technical term, I'll use it, not a cent or say yes to some of those impulsive impressions, that I've
been dist, that someone is inferior to me, that someone is the way they are because of their choices. Or you name your favorite bias or prejudice,
unreflected impression.
They say, monitor your patterns of attention.
It could be through nighttime meditation practices.
It could just be in the sense of learn how not to
ascend to them immediately, give into them immediately,
and reflect on them so that you can change them.
Cedica is really interested in anger. That's the one that he's really, really fastened on.
And he has this whole conversation about the fact that we get angry really fast.
the fact that we get angry really fast, and it takes us into tail spins,
and that we do horrible things because of anger.
He says you should not
ascent to the idea that you've been immediately insulted.
Not ascent to the idea that someone is speaking in a tone that you don't like, you know, and that
is a result you should give them some lip or dismiss them as ignorant or as not in your
camp or whatever. And so it's a kind of a higher-order thinking that you lay on top of your
lower-order arousals. It's very much what Konnamen is talking about in
many ways about fast thinking versus slow thinking. And the Stokes aren't modern-day
neuroscientists, but they do have this idea that you have different tracks, whether
it's your brain or your emotions or your belief system, they think all emotions really are kind of cognitions. And so they think that you can introduce a
higher level layer of reflection on those impulsive things. Some impulsive reactions
you would never want to get rid of. Who would want to get rid of being really frightened if you see a bear?
Right? You want to either freeze or get out of there. Many of them are adaptive. Many are maladaptive.
Unbridled fear is probably maladaptive. Unbridled fear of people that are not like you is probably
highly maladaptive. They're meditators in this sense. They want
you to figure out how to practice monitoring your patterns of attention. That's very...
You might say it's kind of cognitive behavioral therapy of a certain kind, right? Because they
think that your emotions are binelarge cognitive and the manifest in behavioral ways of...
in a behavior, you do this, you do that,
and that you should watch it more carefully.
Now, some turning green in a storm,
blanching when someone shames you,
some stuff you can't control.
It's your autonomic system talking talking and they're all for that.
They know that. But other things you might be able to control. Like some of the expletives
they say that come out of your mouth when you shouldn't. I mean, that's one of the example
Seneca gives. That's language that was in Pulse and you should kind of curve it a little
bit. So here's how I see it.
All those people that think stoicism is just about me and my way of minimizing the impact of the world on me
so that I can be in more control
and I can just sort of, the world is as it is
and I'm the captain of my ship.
No, the stoics are actually saying,
we interpret the world and we interact with
that world and it's through our interpretations and we control some of those interpretations
and change the world. It's not just a philosophy of resignation and acceptance,
which is often how it's interpreted as. The world sucks, I'm here. I have to deal with this deprivation. I'm going to make the best of it. I'm a POW people had interviewed. That's my fate. I'll accept it. I don't think so at all. I think they believe in changing the world, not just accepting it and you change the world through the lenses that you wear. They think sometimes you better change the lens that you're wearing because you may be distorting the world. You may have mis-evaluations.
They would call it misestimates of the world. The world's not just this color in that color.
They think you wear lenses as you see a lot. Long answer to, I think, a really important point
that I don't think people think about when they think about stoicism.
They typically think about resignation, as a word I hear a lot, except things as they
are and just deal with it as opposed to, I create the world in some way through how I see
things.
Which brings me back to one of the other practices you mentioned, which is this idea of thinking
about circles of people and bringing the folks who are on the outer part of your circle
close into you.
I have two questions about that.
One is, can you just say exactly how we would practice that?
Because it does sound close to some of the compassion or love and kindness practices and
Buddhism.
And the second question is, how would the Stoic square that with their warm embrace of slavery?
Okay.
So, the Stoics have this idea that we are connected in the universe.
So they've got to figure out a way of making us connected.
And so they think it's a psychological habit.
And I think the person who really sort of helped us
understand the best, the stoic idea was an enlightenment
philosopher, Adam Smith, so Scottish enlightenment.
They were all reading the stoics.
And he has this idea that you trade places
and fancy as his phrase.
Imagine in a vivid way.
You imagine in a vivid way what's hard to imagine
or another phrase is you bring them to your breast.
You bring them into your breast.
And so that does get the compassion idea going. For a spith it was
empathy, he used the word sympathy, it's not our word, but it really is more empathy. You feel what
they're feeling. It's a kind of a mindset and not just a sense of benevolence, right? Which compassion compassion is, it's you actually imagine, engage in almost a physiological way what those
others are going through.
Now journalism, especially visual journalism, is an amazing way that we do this because we
see images, we see pictures, we see suffering.
But in the 18th century or in the for the Stoics, the turn of the millennium,
they're asking you to do it in your mind. As a visualization, we would call it visualization.
And so it's a very graphic set of images. Now, the institution of slavery is a hard subject.
Anytime you are a historian or a philosopher that deals with
historical periods, you always got to figure out what do you do with stuff that's distasteful to you,
you whitewash it or not. So here's two things. Senika's sometimes, you know, he's writing the
first century of the millennium, he's in Nero's court, because he's the best speech writer. There is man of letters and
he writes about enslavement and he says
You should treat your slave with humanity
because they
To have reason and you could be enslaved and he means enslaved inside
You could be enslaved and he means enslaved inside, not free inside. You have your demons.
Or changes of fortune could easily put you in a role reversal.
That said, some of his enlightenment almost sounding claims, I think, are pleased to treat
you enslaved kindly, because in the Roman system, they could be in courts,
they could claim that you were beating them.
If they're fugitive, you might not get them back,
and so you'd have to deal with your vineyards,
your household, your accounts all by yourself.
I mean, so it's very prudential.
They have a invested interest in treating
slaves well. And some of the remarks that sound more enlightened
might just be self-serving for an elitist class. So I can't
justify Roman or Greek practices of enslavement. On the
other hand, I don't think we should not read them as a
result of that. But I think we should understand the social settings.
I think when sometimes the Romans still seem a lot more, they don't believe in natural
slaves in the way that Aristotle always talked about them.
There's some people who are just by nature of inferior status.
They don't believe that. They believe it's kind of conventional that it happens through capture or
circumstance, but sometimes what seems as more compassionate treatment is
self-serving. They don't want to lose all the
advantages of having a household retinue. So I mean, look, it's also the Roman Empire, conquest,
territorial gain, expanded all cost. There's a lot of barbarism and all that. So I
think whenever you're dealing with complicated texts from complicated periods,
you can't cancel it out to use a phrase simply because it
doesn't jive with our current views of what we know to be a better world and a
better social structure. But we still can learn an enormous amount about our own,
in this case kind of mental psychology or you know the psychology and mental habits
and ethical habits through reading them.
I am really of the opinion that in a classroom you put it all out there and you grapple and
you don't cancel certain parts because you don't know how to deal with it.
I think you have to view it as historical records and try to put it in context.
I'm gonna go back to both of the practices
that I failed to get us back to earlier.
And again, I'm talking about the three practices
you listed early, early on in this discussion.
The first we talked about, which is
sort of thinking about the ego bruises
that come up during the course of the day.
The second was something about the premeditation of evil.
And I'd love to hear more about that
because it does sound like something I naturally do
in my own life is, you know,
think about worst-case scenarios
and it's comforting to play out the worst-case scenario
and see that even in that scenario, like I can survive it.
So that's the great way of putting it.
They go in for a bit of shock and awe.
I think Epic Tetis, especially one of the Stoics,
and that is you imagine a worst case scenario.
So you imagine what would be the worst possible outcome
and you try to live with it for a while, anticipate it, so that you're not caught off guard.
A lot of this is so it's not totally unexpected.
And some of it is a way of being prepared mentally.
Some things I think it's hard to prepare for.
I think, for example, with the pandemic, we should have been better prepared than we were
in.
If you're an infectious disease doc, you might have been better prepared and you got
your social message out.
We could have done better.
But in our personal lives, you're trying to imagine, okay, what would be the worst that
would happen? And you live with it for a while and you ask yourself, is it so bad?
Or how do you respond to it? So it's a bit like the phrase that Cicero uses.
He's not a stoic, but he's a fellow traveler. And we get a lot of texts through him.
Duel in the future. No, they don't think you have to dwell in the future when it's the case
of good stuff happening. Duel in the future when it's stuff that could really disarm you.
So dwell in the future. And here's a horrible phrase. My students think I'm crazy when
I tell them this phrase. It's very stoic from Epictetus and before him, the Presocratic's,
kiss your child goodbye in the morning as if it's the last time.
I do that. I had never heard this phrase before, but it is on my mind and I have to imagine I'm not
alone on this. Every time I send my kid off to school, it's on my mind that something horrible could
happen. And so I just try to keep that on my mind. I don't know if that's healthier or not,
but I do notice myself doing it.
Well, that's that is a pre rehearsal of the bads. That is a pre rehearsal of evil. It's
a way of anticipating and putting a bit of a cushion around you should that eventuality
happen. Now, if you're the kid, as my students often are, they do think that I'm telling them
that their parents have this morbid fear and that seeing the reactions in their face,
they think, oh my god, my parents are so, if they were to say there would be so unfeeling.
So, you know, it gets uptake in a different way from different sides of a relationship,
I think. But I do think it is a way of cushioning a bit,
a dreaded possibility and living with it a little better,
so that you're not blindsided.
Well, let me press on that for just a second,
because I do find myself using this home spun version
of this with professional outcomes, I think,
about my company.
What would happen if it was all to go pear-shaped and what moves could or would I make, et cetera,
et cetera?
And I find it comforting to think through the worst case scenario.
However, I don't know that I can do that with something horrible happening to my son.
When I kiss him goodbye in the morning, I try to be, I don't know if it's coming from
a healthy place. It's just a lot of fear every time he leaves my son. When I kiss him goodbye in the morning, I try to be, I don't know if it's coming from a healthy place. There's just a lot of fear every time he leaves my orbit.
I don't know that I can generate any sort of cushion against the worst thing that I can
imagine happening, which would be something bad happening to him.
Well, I think that's right. It's a little bit like there's a cognitive and an emotional
side to this. So some of it might just be a cognitive habit.
And the Stoics think that you can let it sink
into your emotional framework.
Now, should something horrible happen?
They also have this other, it's not a trick,
but another tool and their toolkit.
And that is that we have this community of support
that we have to remember.
And I think that is part of the
mental apparatus. So they have this idea that you go through worst case scenarios
and almost live them so that should wood could they happen. It's a little bit
like, well think of how you train folks on the battlefield. You're always going
through virtual reality setups so that the scenario
could be one that you would face then and how would you deal with it.
So they're not unlike that.
Survive a veid resist escape, this kind of training for folks that could be paratroopers
or the like.
You got to be able to live it a little bit in order to know how to deal with real deprivation.
So I think that's a reasonable tack.
Don't be blindsided, don't be naive.
Think about it.
I just will put a tiny little addendum to this idea of dwelling in the future or pre-rehearsing
the bads.
And that is, they're non-consequentials.
They don't want you to dwell on consequences. They want you to dwell on the doing, on the striving,
on the living as opposed to just the outcome.
And that's a way of reorienting your head
and your thoughts so that outcome optimization
isn't all you're thinking about.
It's more, did I do my best? Did I strive the best way? Was I good? Not just in the sense of
professionally good, but ethically good as well. And that, I think, is a rather important
bedendum, as I say, to the worst-case scenario practice.
I've made clear early on that I don't have the best memory.
So I think the third practice you talked about was, and this is at the beginning of the
interview was something having to do with mental reservation.
How do we do that?
It's a kind of hedging your bets.
So here's a really simple example, Senna Good gives you.
You want to go out for a boat ride,
but you say, I will go out for a boat ride
unless it rains.
So you have this little clause,
you stick into your thinking,
again, where you're anticipating a bad outcome possibly,
or that it might not happen.
So you're imagining or getting yourself used to the idea
that you might not do it.
It might not work out that way.
And when you set out with your intentions,
your plans, your strategies, your life goals,
you always stick this kind of hedging your bed in so that you can be agile or adaptive.
You're not fixed on an outcome. You're fixed on rather doing your best, striving, putting
your best effort out there as opposed to getting the desired outcome. I will have a picnic today
unless it's in Clement weather.
We typically don't think about that.
You think about, I wanna have a picnic
or you're dealing with kids.
I want, or yourself, I want this to work out well.
I want it to be a glorious day.
I'm planning a wedding.
It's gotta be outdoors right now.
We're in a pandemic.
I don't want it to
rain. And you're so focused on that and fixed on that outcome that if it rains, you'll be really
disappointed. Your face will just go crazy. You might burst into tears and you'll ruin it for
everyone. It's a rather simple thing, but it's called mental reservation. And they have it kind of in a way, sticking if clause in there or an unless clause.
This will be my plan, unless da da da da.
I think of it as agility, adaptiveness.
And when I think about being resilient, I think we know there's a real key to resilience.
To be able to switch your life goals, your life plans a
little bit, if things go a certain way, be able to imagine a slightly different course
of action with regard to a family or, you know, if there's an unforeseen event.
So it's a kind of agility.
Mental agility is really what they're out for as a mental habit practice mental agility.
Sometimes Buddhism is called advanced common sense and I could see how you might
I'd apply that description to stoicism as well. Let me end on a light note or what I think might be a light note.
I noticed in reading my prep doc, one of my colleagues, Gabrielle, put together a little document
for me to prepare for this interview.
One of the things that I noticed in the document that caught my attention was teasing.
Apparently, the Stoics thought a little bit about teasing.
In what way?
The Stoics are often portrayed as heavy, humorless, and all about stiff upper lip,
British style kind of, stoicism.
But they're also about being able to face outcomes well,
even though they're not the ones you want.
And some of that requires a lightness.
So I certainly was thinking of that when I was trying
to prep my mom for her last days at age 97
and you know, we sort of made a joke of her of mortality.
It wasn't going to be forever and how are we going to get through it.
And that I think is an important part of being stoic.
Another way of, you know, you can think about this is I think of the Stoics as also creating partners in life.
So, and this is not quite teasing or lightness, but they're really about forming a cadre, if you like,
fellow partners. And you can't have fellow partners unless you sort of take yourself a little lightly, you're not the center of attention, and you view them as
really sort of on your wave-lade a bit. So when you think about Stoics as creating partners that
have zest and want to live well, that's part of it. Seneca was a letter writer. He was writing to
his friend, Lucilius, he may not have heard of simple letters, but and he's a moral tutor.
Some of it can be a little chasening,
but he also sort of is joking around a little bit.
I noticed you didn't eat your lunch today.
Maybe you should have eaten your lunch today.
I mean, he's sort of, he's creating a social bond.
I'm waiting for that letter to come.
I didn't receive it.
Did you forget to write to me?
It's a sort of a reminder that this is a very human philosophy.
It's also a reminder that the Stoics,
you know, they have emotional skin in the game.
They're not stripping us of that emotional stuff.
They know that you build social capital
on many levels and one of the
levels is clearly by knowing that humor comes from reason and reason is how we get
connected and they're the stuff of emotion. Having a light sense of life is kind
of a part of it. I also just on that note, I think of Santa Cah, you know, and he
is dealing with Nero.
He's trying to meditated how he's going to deal the end of his life.
And the end of his life in a Rubens portrait, he's surrounded by his friends.
You know, he's not alone.
He's not smiling, but he's surrounded by his friends.
And so friendship, connection, sometimes with humor, you know, is a way to think about being
stoic, not just stiff upper lip, pull your socks up, that kind of thing.
Nancy, thank you so much for stoicism 101. Just as we close here, for people who
want to learn more from you, can you please plug your books and anything else
that you put out into the world that people
might want to access?
Sure.
So the most recent book is Stoic Wisdom, Ancient Lessons for Modern Resilience.
And that will give you, I think, a really easy walk through Stoicism 101.
There's an earlier book, Stoic Warriors, but I think Stoic Wisdom is it.
I've got pieces that were in the New York Times, the Washington Post, but you can find
much of that on my website, Nancy Sherman.com.
Really appreciate your time, Nancy.
Thank you very much.
Thank you so much, Dan.
It's been a pleasure.
Big thanks to Nancy.
It's great to talk to her.
This show is made by Samuel Johns, Gabrielle Zuckerman, DJ Kashmir, Justine Davey, Maria
Wartell, and Jen Poient with Audio Engineering by Ultraviolet Audio, as always, a hardy shout
out to by ABC News colleagues, Ryan Kessler, and Josh Kohan.
Thanks for listening, we'll see you soon.
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