The Daily Stoic - Avoid This Sickness | Role Models
Episode Date: June 8, 2021“Nobody wants to get sick. We don’t want food poisoning. We don’t want the flu. We don’t want COVID-19. This is why we protect our immune system, wash our hands, take care of ourselve...s. Good. Health is important. But what about, as the great Phoebe Bridgers put it, emotional motion sickness?”Ryan explains why you should build up your emotional resilience, and reads this week’s meditation from The Daily Stoic Journal, on today’s Daily Stoic Podcast.This episode is brought to you by GoMacro. Go Macro is a family-owned maker of some of the finest protein bars around. They're vegan, non-GMO, and they come in a bunch of delicious flavors. Visit gomacro.com and use promo code STOIC for 30% off your order plus free shipping on all orders over $50.***If you enjoyed this week’s podcast, we’d love for you to leave a review on Apple Podcasts. It helps with our visibility, and the more people listen to the podcast, the more we can invest into it and make it even better.Sign up for the Daily Stoic email: http://DailyStoic.com/signupFollow Daily Stoic:Twitter: https://twitter.com/dailystoicInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/dailystoic/Facebook: http://facebook.com/dailystoicYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/dailystoicTikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@daily_stoic 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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Hi, I'm David Brown, the host of Wundery's podcast business wars. And in our new season, Walmart must fight off target.
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Listen to business wars on Amazon Music or wherever you get your podcasts.
on music or wherever you get your podcasts. Welcome to the Daily Stoic Podcast where each day we bring you a passage of ancient wisdom
designed to help you find strength, insight, and wisdom every day life.
Each one of these passages is based on the 2,000 year old philosophy that has guided some
of history's greatest men and women.
For more, you can visit us at dailysteal.com.
Avoid this sickness.
Nobody wants to get sick.
We don't want food poisoning.
We don't want the flu.
We don't want COVID-19.
And this is why we protect our immune system.
Wash our hands.
Take care of ourselves.
Good.
Health is important.
But what about, as the great Phoebe Bridgers put it, emotional motion sickness?
It's not quite the same as a virus, but it overwhelms our lives just the same.
One day we're angry, the next we're elated.
We're frustrated, excited, worried, relieved, paranoid, entitled swooning, and then depressed.
We're obsessed, and then annoyed, fascinated, then bored, mad as hell, and then overcome
with gratitude.
We love hate, love hate, love hate, love hate, love hate.
Sometimes we're all these things in the course of a single day, even a single hour.
It makes us crazy.
It can kill us if we're not careful.
So we need to take precautions. Remember stoicism is not about not having emotions.
It's about protecting yourself against the extreme ones.
It's about not letting them rule your life.
There are going to be times when we catch something, of course.
But if we build up an immune system,
we'll be able to prevent ourselves from being overrun by them.
Grief, anger, fear, frustration.
These things happen. What matters is that we don't whipsaw by them, grief, anger, fear, frustration, these things happen.
What matters is that we don't whipsaw between them, that we use our reason and our training
to process them, and this is how we avoid emotional, motion sickness.
Roll models.
Adoption was a widespread practice in Roman society, especially the senatorial class, and
as a provision for imperial
succession, Marcus Aurelius was himself the adopted son of the Emperor Antoninus Pius, who himself
was adopted by the Emperor Hadrian, so that Marcus could one day succeed them both to the purple.
While Sennaka was never adopted, his brother Novatus was, becoming Gio, who in the New Testament refuses to press charges
against Saint Paul. But Seneca liked to look at the phenomenon of adoption the other way around,
saying that we can always choose whose children we want to be. For him, Cato, the towering
Resolute Stoic, who railed against Julius Caesar in defense of the Republic, was always standing by
in his mind.
The first book of Marcus really says, Meditations, in fact, is a catalog of all the people that
Marcus had learned from and the lessons he had taken from their lives.
So this week take a minute to think of the models that you can follow, wise and admirable
people that you can measure yourself against.
And this is from this week's entry in the Daily Stoke Journal, which I forgot to
record yesterday, my apologies, but you can check out the Daily Stoke Journal 366 days of writing
and reflection on the art of living by me, Ryan Holiday, anywhere books are sold, including the
Pandid Porch, my bookstore, at thepandiporch.com. We like to say that we don't get to choose our
parents, Seneca said, that they were given to us by chance.
Yet truly, we can choose whose children we'd like to be.
That's in on the brevity of life.
But then, in moral letter, Senuka said,
we can remove most sins if we have a witness standing by
as we are about to go wrong.
The soul should have someone it can respect.
By whose example it can make its inner sanctum
more invaluable. Happy is the person who can
improve others not only when present, but even when in their thoughts.
I think for me this idea of choosing whose children you want to be is great, right?
Whether you had amazing parents or the world's worst parents, you can also choose to be the
children of the greats of history. We did a daily
daddy Milnallongo where Bruce Springsteen is talking about being an ancestor or a ghost.
Who are the ghosts that haunt you and who are the ancestors that inspire you? And how can
you choose to follow in the right footsteps? For me, Robert Green is kind of an adopted
father. He's about my father's age. But he's who I
want to be as a person in many ways professionally. He's deeply inspiring to me the way even that
he has spent so much time and energy and patience shaping me into the writer that I became. That in and of itself has been inspiring
and is an example I try to follow in.
So like, I've never met Marcus Aurelius.
I'm not related to Seneca.
I have no lineage that puts me back into ancient Rome
with Epic Titus, but we can still be the descendants
of these people.
We can still be their children.
James Baldwin was famously talking to his nephew and he said,
you come from steady peasant stock,
people who built the railroads,
people who escaped via the underground railroad,
people who responded to the blows of fate and life with dignity and poise,
and creativity and perseverance.
Now, is this literally true?
Does you know for a fact about the railroads
or the underground railroads?
No, but we choose what tradition we hail from.
We choose whose child we want to be
by the example that we follow,
by the heroes we give ourselves in our mind.
And that's what today's entry is about.
And I hope you take a minute to think about
whose footsteps you're following in.
And what example you are setting so that perhaps someday someone
else might choose to be adopted by you. Thanks so much for listening to the Daily
Stoke podcast. Again if you don't know this you can get these delivered to you via
email every day you just go to dailystoke.com slash email so check it out at
dailystoke.com slash email. So check it out dailystoke.com slash email.
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