The Daily Stoic - Daily Stoic Sundays: How Seneca Overcame Stress
Episode Date: July 26, 2020In today's Daily Stoic Sunday episode, Ryan talks about Seneca, author, playwright, and advisor to the emperor Nero, how he faced the multiple stressors that he encountered in his life, ...and how you can do the same.This episode is brought to you by the Theragun. The new Gen 4 Theragun is perfect for easing muscle aches and tightness, helping you recover from physical exertion, long periods of sitting down, and more—and its new motor makes it as quiet as an electric toothbrush. Try the Theragun risk-free for 30 days, starting at just $199. ***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 @DailyStoic:Twitter: https://twitter.com/dailystoicInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/dailystoic/Facebook: http://facebook.com/dailystoicYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/dailystoicSee 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 weekend edition of the Daily Stoic. Each weekday we bring you a meditation inspired by the ancient Stoic, something that can help you live up to those four
that can help you live up to those four stoic virtues of courage, justice, wisdom, and temperance.
And here, on the weekend, we take a deeper dive
into those same topics.
We interview stoic philosophers.
We reflect. We prepare.
We think deeply about the challenging issues of our time.
And we work through this philosophy
in a way that's more
possible here when we're not rushing to worker to get the kids to school. When we
have the time to think to go for a walk to sit with our journals and to prepare
for what the future will bring. Raising kids can be one of the greatest rewards of a parent's life.
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So if you like to laugh with us as we talk about the hardest job in the world, listen to,
I love my kid, but wherever you get your podcasts. You can listen ad-free on the Amazon
music or Wondery app. Hey, it's Ryan. Welcome to another weekend episode of The Daily Stoic.
You know, it would be insane not to be stressed out right now. I know I'm
super stressed not only because of the COVID stuff. I'm pretty exhausted. I just spent the last
eight days recording the audiobook to Lies of the Stoics, which instead of being able to do in a
studio with a producer, I did it in my office with a sound deadening
things stacked up against box of books and you know the most cobbled together system
you can imagine and couldn't do it with AC because in the AC here in the background and
I was sweating like crazy plus all the other work I had to do.
These are stressful times.
It would be again insane not to be stressed.
No childcare, you haven't been able to go out
or relax or see people.
You've got stuff piling up.
You've got, you know, your schedule's thrown sideways.
It, these are, these are stressful times.
And I think, you know, I do think it's important too
that as Stokes, we don't think that the Stokes
simply do not
experience stress that they're above it or that they stuff it down and just eat it.
That's not what Stoicism is. Stoicism is it's the process of integrating, channeling, dismantling
stress so that it doesn't destroy you.
And obviously, I think, Marcus,
a realist is a good example of this.
If you look at a picture of a president today
when they get elected and then four years later,
when they're up for reelection,
just the amount of gray hair,
the weight they've put on,
out sunken in their cheeks are,
to be head of state is in an immensely stressful job.
Just as if you watch,
you know, you look at photos of your parents when they had you versus when you were a teenager
versus when you went off to college. You know, these are stressful difficult things and I think,
you know, obviously something like a pandemic is only going to contribute to that we're experiencing,
you know, although historically not an anomaly, it is a once in a century kind
of event. And that should, that should certainly add to what is on our plate. And I'm no exception
to that. But, you know, life goes on. We have to figure out how to integrate and overcome
this stress. And so that's what today's message is about. I was specifically interested in how
Sennaka processes and integrates stress,
how he slays his stress as we've been saying.
Look, this is a guy, if you can imagine what working for Nero
would have been like, if you could imagine being exiled
for eight years on the island of Corsica would be like, if you could
imagine the stress and the pain of losing a young child as Seneca did, as just a writer,
I am in awe of what Seneca was able to accomplish.
And I shudder to think at how difficult it must have been, given the primitive writing
tools that he had at the time.
And just what it would have been like to publish then
to deal with feedback then,
to have something in your head
and the stress of it not being as good on the page,
these are sort of timeless difficulties.
What Senaco went through is not that different
than what we go through, what Marcus went through
is not that different than what we go through.
Stress is stress and the still exists
have been processing it
and organizing it and I think overcoming it for centuries.
We do talk a lot about this in our SLEE,
your stress challenge as you can check out
at dailystoke.com slash stress.
But today's message is about how Seneca managed
to do this, what sort of strategy and ideas
we can take from Senaika.
Certainly, I'm applying these to my life and you can probably hear it in my voice.
I am pretty damn tired, but I am proud of myself. I haven't lost my temper about it.
I've, you know, kept up the good parts of my routine. I've been productive.
I haven't let it make me miserable. I haven't enforced any false deadlines on it.
I'm just checking it off one box at a time,
not trying to let the crazies out there get to me,
which is all a person can do,
and I hope you're able to do, so now we'll get to it.
There's no question that Santa Claus life is stressful.
Plagues, natural catastrophes,
financial crises, frustrating
colleagues, personal insecurities, existential angst, deranged leaders and bosses, and a
lifelong chronic health condition to boot.
His life was littered with stresses and anxieties.
But the truth is that if it wasn't, if everything had been easy, we probably wouldn't be talking
about him 2, thousand years later.
So how did he manage? How did he deal with his stress? What can he teach us about managing our own?
It's good that in addition to all his experiences that Sennaka was such a great writer because his letters,
his essays, his plays, indeed all of his writings were preoccupied with these problems and teach us so much about
how we can conquer our own modern stresses and anxieties.
Never will there be a shortage of reasons for anxieties?"
Seneca wrote, whether born of happiness or misery life will press on its way from one
pursuit to another.
But he reminds his friend, Luciliusus that we can hold out free from anxiety during
life's siege. We all can. We can avoid getting swept up in all the chaos and all the responsibilities
and all the overwhelming goals and aspirations of life. We can overcome adversity, achieve
peace of mind, and reign over the greatest empire, as Sica said, which he believed was becoming emperor of oneself,
of one's emotions. Okay, but how? First, he would say, we must come to the realization that there
are more things likely to frighten us than there are to crush us. We suffer more in imagination than
in reality. He said, we spend so much time worried about how bad things are going to be. We torture ourselves
more than the thing that we're worried about ever could. That is, if it happens at all. So what I
advise you to do, he said, is do not be unhappy before the crisis comes. We are in the habit of
exaggerating or imagining or anticipating sorrow. Instead of letting those racing thoughts and
outsized fears swirl around in his head
he said, you should write down whatever enters in your head. You should get out all those thoughts on
paper. You should cage your monkey mind in a journal. Senaq's evening review was essential to calm
and down. It was essential to self-improvement and personal growth. This is how to deal with one's ills," he said.
This brings peace and freedom. To conquer his stress, Sennaka also made it a routine to seek
out manageable stress and challenges that could make him stronger. He took plunges in freezing
water. He fasted, were eighth the cheapest and scantiest fare. He went out in public wearing his
worst clothes. He slept on the floor, he
made it a priority to practice what he called voluntary discomfort.
For familiarity with exposure to danger will give contempt for danger, he explained.
It is precisely in times of immunity from care that the soul should toughen itself beforehand
for occasions of greater stress, and it is while fortune is kind that it should fortify itself against her violence.
In days of peace, the soldier performs maneuvers,
throws up earthworks when no enemy is in sight,
and wearies himself by gratuitous toil
in order that he may be equal to avoidable toil.
This is what modern cognitive and behavioral therapists now call exposure therapies,
getting close and personal with your anxieties. It's also about toughening yourself up,
about practicing, about developing real confidence in your ability to persevere and survive and endure.
Seneca stressed about all the things that we stress about. He was afraid of losing his job. He
worried about not being able to provide for his family.
He was anxious about whether his writing would be recognized
or lost to obscurity.
He was stressed about the future of his country.
He knew that life was inherently unpredictable
and he was terrified of what he imagined.
Life would be like everything he worked for
was suddenly snatched away by the spear thrust of fortune.
So he stopped imagining.
He exposed himself. He got face-to-face with his fears and then he asked himself the simple question,
is this what I was so afraid of? Seneca, in other words, slayed his stress by bringing them closer,
summoning them by walking right up to them again and again and again and realizing that most
things torment us when they ought not to
torment us at all. Sometimes admittedly he couldn't cage those racing thoughts on the page.
Sometimes there was no amount of exposure that cured him. Sometimes his problems felt especially
vexing and painful, but he discovered to make even these seem less severe. All you have to do,
he said, is draw further back and laugh.
We get so consumed and distracted by the immediacy of what's happening around us that we forget
to see the big picture. Zoom out, he says, and look at this from space, not with your ear to the ground.
The troubles you're having at work will be ridiculous to you. Three jobs from now.
Think about all the things you stressed about when you were younger and how silly they seemed to you today.
Now consider that this exact evolution
will happen to you again at middle age
and again in old age, if you are lucky to live that long.
Draw back and laugh, you said it's freeing, it's a relief.
So yes, Asenica said and believed stress is a fact of life,
but being stressed and feeling stressed,
that is always a choice.
It's a choice we make,
or it's a choice we don't make. In fact, this is what all of the Stoics teachings revolve around,
the idea of combating and avoiding the unnecessary pain and stress and anxiety and worry and
frustration on focusing on what is in our choice and making the right choices. We see Marcus
really is filling the pages of his private journal with notes to himself on how to escape anxiety and not be controlled by his temper.
We see epic teed is talking to his students over and over and over again about focusing on what was up to them and nothing else.
The stoic cannon is loaded with practical and actionable steps to overcoming and domesticating feelings of anxiety and stress.
overcoming and domesticating feelings of anxiety and stress. It's up to us, though, to choose whether to put them to work. It's up to us to choose agency over our own emotions and feelings.
It's up to us to take control. How much more enjoyable would your days be without the constant
dread of stress looming over you? How much more productive would you be without spending hours per day indulging in imagined troubles? What could you be capable of if you trained for it,
if you practiced, if you exposed yourself, you know the answer. And of course, if you are looking
to slay your stress, you can check out the daily stoic slay your stress challenge. It's an actionable
14-day challenge designed to help you reclaim your life
from the negative effects of stress and anxiety. We've designed this course to help you reclaim
your life. We lay out the most actionable ways to manage your stress and anxiety back
by thousands of years of research and practice, particularly the insights from someone as wise
and impressive as Senica. You can check it out at dailystoke.com slash stress.
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