The Daily Stoic - Can You Embrace The Challenge Like They Did? | How Stoics Develop a Strong Mindset

Episode Date: July 4, 2023

The fact that America exists is the ultimate argument that Stoicism is not apathy and that philosophy is not mere theory. Because without Stoicism, it’s possible there would have been no re...volution, no Constitution, no Bill of Rights and no Fourth of July.Thomas Jefferson kept a copy of Seneca on his nightstand. George Washington staged a reproduction of a play about Cato at Valley Forge in the winter of ‘77/’78 to inspire the troops (having first read the Stoics as a teenager). Patrick Henry cribbed lines from that same play which we now credit to him: “Give me Liberty or give me death!” John Adams, Ben Franklin—almost all the founders were well-versed in the works of the Stoics. It’s partly what gave them the courage to found a new nation against such incredible odds, and it’s partly what set up the principles that formed that nation and changed the world.---And in today's Daily Stoic video excerpt, Ryan shares some key strategies that the Stoics use to cultivate and bolster their mental toughness. You can view the full video here: www.youtube.com/watch?v=LQ5ZRQRH6Vc ✉️ Sign up for the Daily Stoic email: https://dailystoic.com/dailyemail🏛 Check out the Daily Stoic Store for Stoic inspired products, signed books, and more.📱 Follow us: Instagram, Twitter, YouTube, TikTok, FacebookSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome to the Daily Stoic Podcast, where each day we read a passage of ancient wisdom designed to help you in your everyday life. On Tuesdays, we take a closer look at these stoic ideas, how we can apply them in our actual lives. Thanks for listening, and I hope you enjoy. The fact that America exists is the ultimate argument that stoicism is not apathy and that philosophy is not mere theory. Because without stoicism, it's possible there would be no revolution, no constitution, no Bill of rights, and no fourth of July. Thomas Jefferson kept a copy of Seneca on his nightstand. George Washington staged a
Starting point is 00:00:52 reproduction of a play about Cato at Valley Forge in the winter of 77 and 78 to inspire the troops, having first read The Stoics himself as a teenager. Patrick Henry cribbed lines from that same play that we now credit to him. Give me liberty or give me death, he said. John Adams, Ben Franklin, all the founders were well versed in the works of The Stoics. It's partly what gave them the courage to found a new nation against such incredible odds.
Starting point is 00:01:23 It's partly what set up the principles that formed that nation and changed the world. At the core of the American experiment was liberty. At the core of stoicism, we have not only a love of freedom, but the counter-balancing virtues to that freedom, justice, duty, self-control, honor, selflessness. These are the traits that are required not only in those dark days of revolution, as bloody footprints from starving soldiers marked the snows in New Jersey in New York,
Starting point is 00:01:54 but also the traits needed equally now in moments of prosperity and plenty, division and distraction. So today while you're grilling and relaxing with friends, remember that the comfort you enjoy now grew out of a philosophy that was made to embrace discomfort and to do the right thing, whatever the cost. Remember that the American victory over the British came first
Starting point is 00:02:18 because a group of American stoics first found victory over themselves. Because for all their Stoic resignation, these men and women also deeply believed in their own agency and their own power. Senaqa said, most powerful is he who has himself in his own power. The founding fathers built a country on that very foundation.
Starting point is 00:02:40 They employed the Stoic virtues like a hammer and a chisel, like a saw and a nail, to master their passions, divisions, tempers, interests, and strive to be something better, something more than they were remotely capable of being in the years of their colonial youth. That wasn't easy, it wasn't free. But they embraced the challenge and challenged us today to do the same. Hi, I'm David Brown, the host of Wonder East Podcast Business Wars. And in our new season, two of the world's leading hotel brands, Hilton and Marriott,
Starting point is 00:03:18 stare down family drama and financial disasters. Listen to business wars on Amazon Music or wherever you get your podcasts. Life isn't fair. Life is unpredictable. Pace of change is merciless. The amount of adversity and difficulty that can happen is endless. Anistok has to cultivate not just the physical strength to be able to withstand all that, but the mental strength, the physical strength to be able to withstand all that, but the mental strength, the fortitude to be able to not just survive it, but thrive inside of it. In letters from Estoic, Seneca talks about how he pities the person who has never been through adversity because they haven't had a chance to prove themselves. And so the reason we push ourselves physically,
Starting point is 00:04:06 why we get in the cold plunge, why we get up early, why we take on things that other people say are impossible or difficult, is to test ourselves. It's to see what we're capable of. Some of the adversity of life is going to be outside of our control. But it's only in seeking out adversity that's in our control that we train ourselves, that we develop the muscles, the skills, the confidence to know
Starting point is 00:04:28 hey I can handle this. Mark Sures says how will you meet the adversity of tomorrow? He says with the same weapons that you had today you have to cultivate and sharpen those weapons. You have to build those muscles and you do it by seeking out adversity doing hard things not accident, but on purpose. One of the great stokes, Xenos said that reading books is a way to converse with the dead. When Xenos was a young man, he went to the Oracle of Delphine and got a prophecy. They said, you will become wise when you begin to have conversations with the dead.
Starting point is 00:05:01 And he ultimately realizes that what the Oracle means is that by reading, we are able to talk to people who lived very long ago. If you think about Mark Surealist's meditations, one of the books that I lean on. You're getting direct access to the brain of a man who lived 2,000 years ago, Tolstoy's a calendar of wisdom which I read every morning. That's a guy who died over a hundred years ago,
Starting point is 00:05:23 but he's preparing something for you to think about and read every single day. We become stronger, we become better, we become wiser, when we have conversations with the debt. Perspective is of course everything, right? If you've ever been stuck in traffic in Los Angeles, it was a miserable annoying experience and ugly bit of modernity But if you've ever flown over Los Angeles at night, you've seen that same traffic and all of a sudden it's beautiful The sort of interconnected living organism. It is humanity. I'm on this trip right now with my family Which had all these different delays of this inclement weather that on the one hand We could have said oh this ruins the trip instead. We, this is an adventure. This is an experience. Mentally tough,
Starting point is 00:06:08 mentally resilient people, they manage to find the right perspective. They manage to grab the right handle on the situation. Right? Do you see what's good in it? Do you see what it allows you to do? Do you see the way inside the obstacle? Or do you see where you're stuck, where there's the impediment where you can't do something. There's a lot that happens in our life, it's out of our control, but what is in our control is the perspective we choose to take the lens at which we choose to look at the... Epictetus says every situation has two handles, right?
Starting point is 00:06:39 One will bear weight the other won't. So what are you going to grab this by? How are you going to choose to see it? How are you going to choose to try to carry it? It's the same thing a different perspective. Life is like that. We can look at it one way or we can choose to look at it another way. We can choose to look at something as an obstacle or we can choose to look at something as an opportunity. We can see chaos if we look close. We can see order if we look from afar. We can see chaos if we look close, we can see order if we look from afar, we can see disadvantage if we look at it one way, we can see advantage if we look the other, we can see obstacle from this perspective opportunity from the other. It's a little bit counterintuitive, but one of the best ways to increase our mental capacity, our mental toughness, is by doing hard physical things. Seneca says, we treat the body rigorously so that it is not disobedient to the mind.
Starting point is 00:07:32 We're practicing showing our body who's in charge, we're building the muscle of the mind. So we learn that when we think we can't do something, that's not always true. That we have the power to outthink, to out create, to push past, the limitations or the warning signs, and do things that a lesser version of ourselves wouldn't think possible. Stephen Pressfield talks about this Martin Luther King actually talked about this idea that there's sort of a north and a south in each of us, and that we're in sort of a war against the lower self, that the higher self is battling to surpass to transcend the lower self.
Starting point is 00:08:08 And I think when you treat the body rigorously, when you create a strong and tough mind, you're winning that battle, and that makes you so much better. There's things that are up to us, and there's things that are not up to us. Epochetus, one of the great stokes, who says that the key task in life is separating matters into two categories. Stuff that's up to us and the stuff that's not.
Starting point is 00:08:33 You can't be mentally tough or mentally resilient if you spend all of your mental energy resenting, arguing with, blaming, regretting the things that have happened that are outside of your control that weren't your fault, where fault no longer matters. Just as you can't be physically tough, you can't be physically resilient if you are throwing yourself over and over again at brick walls that you do not have the strength or power or control or ability to change. You have to know what's up to you and what's not up to you. This is the serenity prayer.
Starting point is 00:09:10 You have to have the wisdom to know what is up to you and what isn't. You have to have the courage to face what is up to you. You have to have the serenity in the peace and the stillness to accept what is not up to you. The Canadian astronaut Chris Hadfield once pointed out, he said, look, astronauts are not braver than other people. They're just meticulously prepared. Courage isn't this thing that you magically have. It's something that you have to cultivate. The athlete that hits the winning shot, that's that, just from raw braver.
Starting point is 00:09:43 That's from the fact that they have practiced it over and over and over again. They know what they're capable of. I've said before I don't believe in myself I have evidence. Courage confidence comes from that evidence. You have to cultivate it and you cultivate it by doing hard things by pushing yourself out of your comfort zone, right? By not listening to that voice that says you can't do it. It's hard. What if it doesn't work?
Starting point is 00:10:07 You cultivate courage. As Seneca was saying, by treating the body rigorously, by pushing past those boundaries, by incrementally making yourself a little bit better and a little bit braver. We can't just hope to be brave when it counts. We have to cultivate that bravery.
Starting point is 00:10:20 We have to cultivate that courage slowly and steadily over time in the work that we do on ourselves. Hey, prime members, you can listen to the Daily Stoic early and ad-free on Amazon Music, download the Amazon Music app today, or you can listen early and ad-free with Wondery Plus in Apple Podcasts. When we think of sports stories, we tend to think of tales of epic on the field glory. But the new podcast, Sports Explains the World, brings you some of the wildest and most surprising sports stories
Starting point is 00:11:05 you've never heard, like the teenager who wrote a fake Wikipedia page for a young athlete and then watched as a real team fell for his prank. Diving into his Wikipedia page we turned three career goals into 11, added 20 new assists for good measure. Figures that nobody would, should, have believed. And the mysterious secret of a US Olympic superstar killed at the peak of his career. Was it an accident? Did the police screw up the investigation? It was also nebulous. Each week, Sports Explains the World goes beyond leagues and stats to share stories that will redefine your understanding of sports and their impact on the world. Listen to sports explains the world,
Starting point is 00:11:46 on the Wondering app or wherever you get your podcasts. You can listen to sports explains the world early and add free on Wondering Plus.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.