The Daily Stoic - Daily Stoic Sundays: Four Strategies for Reading Better
Episode Date: March 15, 2020Ryan talks about how you can improve your reading skill and get more from the books you love.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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Welcome to the Sunday edition of the Daily Stood Podcast. My name is Ryan Holiday. For over a decade
I've been writing and thinking and talking about stilicism and so each Sunday now
We're going to be rolling out a special episode that will be either me riffing on a number of topics, maybe me riffing or expanding on an article that I've written or deep diving into an idea that I think's important that I think you'll benefit from.
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I'm in the middle of rereading Seneca's letters.
I first read Seneca's letters when I was in college.
I bought letters of a stoke, a Penguin Classics edition.
It's sort of been 2006, 2007.
And I've rereaded a bunch of times now.
I'm actually in the middle of going through this one.
This is a new translation for me.
This is the low-v edition.
And the reason I'm re-reading it is that it's been a while
since I read it, and I wanted to go back to something
that it'd been so influential to me.
There's this great line that actually appears
in Marx's Realist's Meditation.
He says, no man steps in the same river twice.
And the idea being that although it's the same book, I've changed in the same river twice. And the idea being that, although it's the same book,
I've changed, the world has changed,
even in the 10 years, maybe a little bit
how people see Seneca has changed.
And so I'm getting all sorts of new things from it.
So you can like, look at my notes here.
All these different pages, I folded all these pages,
it's filled with writing.
You wouldn't think it would be filled with writing
and observations given that I've already read it,
given that I've written books about Seneca,
but I'm getting something new out of it.
And that's really the importance of rereading.
And Seneca himself, he talks about this
in one of the early letters, which I was just rereading.
He talks about how he's suspicious of people
who read only very widely, who sort of flit
from book to book. he's saying that you
actually have to sort of dwell on a number of master thinkers, and that the more times you read them,
the deeper you go into the material, the more that sort of gets absorbed into your system and the
more, ideally, this is the whole point of reading and philosophy is to turn words into works.
So if you're just accumulating as much words as many words as possible, you're not doing it.
It's about training, it's about muscle memories,
it's about absorbing it into your soul.
Each year, I set out with a list of four or five books
that I'm going to reread in that year.
Sometimes they're novels, sometimes like this year,
one of them is to reread some of the Santa Cruz letters.
I set out to reread books that I think I've either drifted a little bit away from,
that I think I might have a different take from.
Maybe I was just so fond of,
I have such fond memories of I want to reengage with.
The idea is I'm actively seeking out books
on a regular basis to reread,
to sort of step in that river again,
and see how much it's changed,
and see how much I've changed.
This is a Fahrenheit 451.
This is my copy about this in high school.
I had to read it for class.
And then about three or four years ago,
I was like, I haven't read that book in a while.
I wonder, I'm gonna reread it.
And it's like, when I read it the first time,
I interpreted it as this idea of a book about censorship
about how government sensors
and keeps information from the people.
But I realized that I totally missed the point when I read it
when I was in 9th or 10th grade.
Actually, Fahrenheit 451 is about how we censor ourselves.
He talks about how that censorship came from the bottom up.
It was people not wanting to offend other people
or be offended by other people that led to the book burnings.
So I kind of had an idea, this totalitarian, not CS system.
And it's the opposite of that.
It's much closer to where we are now
with this sort of political correctness that we see.
And so you realize that even if you took something from a book,
you might have gotten the totally opposite meaning,
or maybe what you thought then was right,
but now you've changed or now things have changed.
So the more you interact with material, the more interpretations you're going to get out of it. One of my other favorite
books is Stephen Pressfield's War of Art. My copy of this book is, you know, 10, 12,
13 years old now. And it's filled with all sorts of different notations and, you know,
things that I took from it. Because when I read it at 19, you know, I didn't know anything.
I hadn't written anything.
It's actually a book I try to reread
as I'm starting out with each new creative process.
It's like a kick in the pants, it's inspirational.
I'm trying to take it to a higher level with each book.
So I have books that I reread each time.
One of the other books I reread,
I read Tolstoy's Calendar of Wisdom every year.
I'm on my, I think, two and a half years in.
And I'm hoping to have a hundred more reads of that book, right?
Each time I read it, and I notice things that I miss the first time,
where I notice things that I feel differently about the second time,
the more you engage with the material,
the more you will come away with.
Epic Titus is like, the philosophers were not content with mere learning, but you have to add
practice and training. Too easily we forget what we learn and it just sort of goes in one year and
out the other. And so the rereading is really about is about taking our understanding of the ideas
to the next level. So I've probably read meditations a hundred times. I've probably personally typed out almost every passage
in that book at one time or another.
I've done it by hand, I've done it for social media quotes,
I've done it for passages in my own writing.
I'm just constantly interacting with this material
and the things that I took from Mark's Realises
Meditations when I was 19 is different than when I took
from it when I was 29 and hopefully it will be very different than when I take from it when I was 29, and hopefully it will be very different
than when I take from it when I'm 39,
if I'm lucky to live that long.
The text stays the same, but we change.
And so I just find something very satisfying,
and even when I am rereading the same version
of an old text, even noticing what I marked before,
noticing what I didn't mark before,
how I could have missed things.
Sometimes I even sort of get glimpse or feelings of like,
what mood I was in when I must have read it the first time,
what I was eating, like from the food that I spilled in it.
It's just this deeper relationship to the material
that's really, really important.
In the ancient world, you gotta, you gotta realize like,
they didn't have access to unlimited amounts of books.
They didn't have audible subscriptions,
they didn't have script, you know, they didn't have a library unlimited amounts of books. They didn't have audible subscriptions. They didn't have script.
You know, they didn't have a library they could go
to check out books so that they were forced
to have a much deeper relationship with the material.
These books were precious items.
They didn't take for granted.
They didn't read a few pages and then move on, right?
They didn't speed read through them.
They dove deep into the text.
They memorized them. You know, in meditations, you see even all the kinds of quotes that Marcus
Arellis is pulling likely from memory, from his deep reading of other material
that he's poured over himself.
And so, you know, don't be content to just read something once, but read it over
and over and over again.
You fully have to
absorb the material. You've got to become one with it, it's got to become one
with you, and then you have to change and go out and experience things and then
come back to the material and engage in that process over and over again. By the
way, if you are looking to take your reading to the next level, this thing we're
talking about here, that this sort of active rereading strategy is something we
talk a lot about in a reading course.
We can check it out.
It's the read to lead course from Daily Stoic.
Harry Truman said that not all readers are leaders,
but all leaders are readers.
You have to be, I think reading should be an active practice.
It's a skill you have to be getting good at.
You have to invest in, you have to train yourself in.
And so you've got some of our best strategies there,
inspired by the Stoics, inspired by my practices, inspired by some of the experts we talked about. You
can check that out at dailystoke.com slash read.
Thanks for listening to today's Daily Stoke Podcast. I've got really great news. The
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So if you haven't read the book
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