The Daily Stoic - Don’t Rush Through This | Ask DS
Episode Date: March 14, 2024Seneca makes the point, however, that what we are really rushing towards—with all deliberate speed—is death. That’s what he means when he says that we get death wrong. Death is not some... distant thing in the future, not some one-time thing that looms ahead. Instead, death is something happening to you right now. It’s happening as you read this email (hope it’s been worth it!), it’s happening as you struggle to put your daughter’s shoes on so you can drop her off at school and then it’s happening still more as you sit down to that coffee meeting you rushed to even though you didn’t want to have it in the first place. It happens as you procrastinate, it happens as you distract yourself, it happens as you make bad choices, it happens as you worry and dread and whine.And that’s why we created The Daily Stoic Spring Forward Challenge. It’s a set of ten brand-new actionable challenges designed to push you to examine your choices, your relationships, and your day-to-day patterns and move you closer to living your best life.“Remember how long you’ve been putting this off,” Marcus Aurelius writes, “how many extensions the gods gave you, and you didn’t use them.” He reminds us “that there is a limit to the time assigned you, and if you don’t use it to free yourself it will be gone and will never return.”Don’t rush through life, don’t rush toward death. Use the time assigned to you and sign up for The Spring Forward Challenge NOW at dailystoic.com/spring! Challenge starts March 19!----On today's episode of the Daily Stoic Podcast, Ryan talks with Kentucky Wildcats Men's Basketball Team in which he focuses on the timeless wisdom of the four cardinal virtues—wisdom, courage, justice, and temperance.*A note on the audio for this episode: an issue with Ryan's live mic resulted in the discrepancy in audio quality that you hear. We apologize for the inconvenience.✉️ 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)
If you want to focus more on your well-being this year, you should read more and you should give
Audible a try. Audible offers an incredible selection of audiobooks focused on wellness
from physical, mental, spiritual, social, motivational, occupational, and financial.
You can listen to Audible on your daily walks. You can listen to my audiobooks on your daily
walks. And stillness is the key. I have a whole chapter on walking, on walking meditations,
on getting outside. And it's one of the things I do when I'm walking.
Audible offers a wealth of wellbeing titles
to help you get closer to your best life and the best you.
Discover stories to inspire, sounds to soothe,
and voices that can change your life.
Wherever you are on your wellbeing journey,
Audible is there for you.
Explore bestsellers, new releases, and exclusive originals.
Listen now on Audible.
I'm Peter Frankenpern.
And I'm Afro W. Hirsch.
And we're here to tell you about our new season of Legacy,
covering the iconic, troubled musical genius
that was Nina Simone.
Full disclosure, this is a big one for me.
Nina Simone, one of my favorite artists of all time,
somebody who's had a huge impact on me,
who I think objectively stands apart for the level of her talent, the audacity of her message. If I was a
first year at university, the first time I sat down and really listened to her
and engaged with her message, it totally floored me. And the truth and pain and
messiness of her struggle that's all captured in unforgettable music
that has stood the test of time.
Think that's fair, Peter?
I mean, the way in which her music comes across
is so powerful, no matter what song it is.
So join us on Legacy for Nina Simone.
["Legacy for Nina Simone"] Welcome to the Daily Stoic Podcast, where each day we read a passage of ancient wisdom
designed to help you in your everyday life.
Well, on Thursdays, we not only read the daily meditation, but we answer some questions from
listeners and fellow Stoics.
We're trying to apply this philosophy just as you are.
Some of these come from my talks,
some of these come from Zoom sessions
that we do with Daily Stoic Life members
or as part of the challenges.
Some of them are from interactions I have on the street
when there happened to be someone there recording,
but thank you for listening
and we hope this is of use to you.
Don't rush through this. You look around and you see people rushing everywhere,
rushing through traffic,
rushing to get their kids down to bed,
rushing through work to get to the weekend,
no time to talk, no time to sit.
There's too much to do.
There's somewhere to go. The faster, the better. And this was true in the ancient world as it is today. In Rome,
people were rushing to get their mail, rushing to win the next public office, rushing to the next
round of the games in the Coliseum, rushing to their next big accomplishment. At least,
that's what they thought. Seneca makes the point, however, that what we're really rushing towards
with all deliberate speed
is death. That's what he means when he says that we get death wrong. Death is not some distant thing
in the future, some looming end date to which the proper response is to try to squeeze in as much
time as possible before it comes. Instead, he said, death is something happening to you right now.
It's happening to you as you listen to this episode. I hope it's been worth it. It's happening to you as you struggle to put on your daughter's shoes
so you can drop her off at school. And then it's still happening as you sit down to that
coffee meeting you rushed through, even though you didn't want to have it in the first place.
The time that passes, Seneca reminds us, is death. It belongs to death. You'll never get to live that
which has been lived again. So why are you rushing? Why are you thinking about the future at the expense of the present? But
no season reminds us of the possibility of rebirth, of a chance for life to start anew
than spring.
After the long hibernation of winter, it's time to reset, to reassess a patient time
to plant seeds in the form of better habits and better routines
so you can reap what you sowed come summer and fall with more meaningful relationships
and success and presence.
And by the way, that's what we created this challenge I've been telling you about, the
Daily Stoic Spring Forward Challenge.
It's 10 brand new actionable challenges designed to push you to examine your choices, your
relationships, your day-to-day patterns,
and move you closer towards living your best life.
Remember how long you've been putting this off,
Marks realist writes,
how many extensions the gods gave you
and you didn't use them.
He says that there is a limit to the time assigned to you
and if you don't use it to free yourself,
it will be gone and never return.
Don't rush through life, Don't rush towards death.
Use the time assigned to you and sign up right now for the Spring Forward Challenge that
we're doing at Daily Stoic and sign up at DailyStoic.com slash spring.
It starts on March 19th.
I'm really excited about it.
I'm already feeling the weather change.
I'm reminded of that Philip Larkin line.
Begin afresh, afresh, afresh.
And I hope you can do the same with me and thousands of stoics all over the world.
It's gonna be awesome.
If you did our New Year, New You Challenge,
it's a great way to build on that.
If you didn't do the challenge
and just sort of muddled through winter,
well, I think now is the time to get serious.
And I hope to see you there.
Remember, if you're a Daily Stoic Life member,
you get this challenge and all our challenges for free.
But I hope to see you in there. Daily if you're a Daily Stoke Life member, you get this challenge and all our challenges for free. But I hope to see you in their dailystoke.com slash spring.
Talk soon.
Hey, it's Ryan. Welcome to a Thursday episode of the Daily Stoke podcast. I brought you
a chunk of my episode of my talk
to the Kentucky men's basketball team recently.
And here we are now in the middle of March madness.
And I wanted to bring you the little bit of Q and A
that we had after this sort of an informal discussion,
the football talk, which I'll bring to you later.
You know, that was in a nice sort of theater.
This was in the private dining room at Jan.
And, uh, I just, you know, one of the cool experiences as I went around and
toured the facility after is they, uh, one of coach cows assistance took me
aside, he showed me this drawer and there was one of my books, they had a
whole stack of ego is the enemy, which they give to recruits and players who join the team.
That was just such a not at all what I could have imagined when I wrote that book.
And I think it says something about the power of stoicism.
But anyways, I'll bring you this quick Q&A and I'll let you get back to watching basketball
or whatever it is you're doing today.
And I hope you enjoy.
Look, I think we all face a lot of noise, right? You you guys face a ton of noise. You face the noise of the crowd.
You face the noise of people on social media.
You face the noise of people in the regular media.
And then, yeah, you've got teammates.
You've got competitors drawing at you.
You've got coaches telling you this.
Maybe you've got your parents telling you that.
You've got a lot coming at you.
And so I think Estoke tries to cultivate
a sense of some protections between you and all that
noise.
You've got to decide what you let in and what you don't let in.
And then you've got to go, okay, in this moment, if I, they just told me I'm not measuring
up and if I don't do X, Y, Z, I'm going to get cut.
Or someone just, we just had a real brutal film session and they showed me all the things I did wrong.
If I add on top of that, that I suck,
if you add on top of that, what you're doing
is taking away energy from what you can control,
what you can do better.
And if you are responding emotionally instantaneously to how that thing makes you feel, that's also a problem.
Where I find ego or a lack of discipline
can get me in trouble.
Like, let's say I'm working on one of my books.
I submit it to my publisher.
I think it's the best work that I've ever done.
I'm pumped about it.
I want them to be like, you're amazing.
This is the greatest thing we've ever read.
But instead, you know what they do?
They send me back.
It's just filled with with this is wrong.
This is wrong.
There's a mistake.
What about this?
What about this?
And the ego part of me wants to go like, who are you to tell me this?
You don't understand me, you know, all that like sort of teenagerness that we all still
have in us, no matter how old we are.
But what I do, I have practices.
It was like, when I get those notes, I don't respond for a week.
I let them sit. I let it filter in right and then I try to look at it from different angles
I try to get other opinions and then what I try to find in that is
You know what?
What's valuable what I agree with I try to react from a place of understanding and
confidence rather than a place of understanding and confidence, rather than a place of rebelliousness or ego.
And I try to do what I can to integrate that feedback
into getting better.
But if I send out a response three seconds later
in that space of emotion,
just like if one of you guys after a game
is tweeting out the first thought that pops into your mind.
The chances of that aging well, or that still feeling true
the next day, the day after, or not making things worse for you,
that's what you're trying to avoid.
So it's about that space between you and the response.
Even if that thing is unfair, even if it's frustrating,
even if you are going to have to deal with it,
probably not best to deal with it in the moment when you're
hot.
So the discipline to do that, to go like, hey,
I'm going to deal with this tomorrow after I take a walk,
after I think about it.
That's a big part of what we're talking about.
Yeah?
So what are you supposed to thank
if you don't have ego?
I mean, it's confident and then it's ego.
So what are you supposed to be thinking
as you're doing something like that?
Am I not supposed to be like,
well, I can brush his ass?
Or am I supposed to be like,
so how do you keep it not too low?
Sure.
Well, I can think about it, right?
Like, let's take a different sport,
like a prize fighting or something, boxing, right?
If you don't think you can beat the guy,
you're not gonna beat the guy, right?
You gotta have some sense that you trained,
you got a plan, you did the work, you know it's possible.
If you go in there and you're doubting yourself,
that's not gonna work, right?
But what is the cycle of prize fighting?
So the underdog beats the overconfident champion.
Then what happens?
They become the overconfident champion.
And so what we're trying to do is replace ego, which is either I'm unbeatable, I'm
the best, I'm perfect.
And then there's also the ego of like, I'm worthless, no one likes me.
There's also that self-obs obsession of the doubts, right?
Like what they call imposter syndrome in the middle there.
That's confidence.
And I was thinking a lot about this.
You guys know the story of David and Goliath, right?
That's the story of confidence versus ego, right?
Goliath thinks I'm unbeatable.
Everyone else, like David's not the first challenger, right?
A lot of people hear Goliath's challenge, but they don't think it's possible, right?
They're afraid.
But David has the belief in himself.
He has the knowledge that he can do it.
But he's also not like, oh, you know, I'm God's instrument.
Of course I'm going to win.
What does David do?
David gets a sling.
David has a tool.
David has something that Goliath is not expecting.
That's why he wins.
So I think that's a good question.
I'm not saying you're just like a carpet
that everyone walks all over.
You've got to know your strengths.
You also want to be aware of your weaknesses.
And you also want to be focused of your weaknesses. And you also, you want to be focused not on
how strong you are, but on what you're doing to be stronger
or what you're doing to be better.
That's what puts you in a position
to keep learning and growing and not become complacent
and thus, you know, vulnerable.
All right, one more thing.
One of the most, so like, if you don't get emotional
and you put the work in,
and you're not making shots, so how are you
supposed to be about that?
And you know you're coming into gym every day,
putting in shots, and you're missing shots.
Sure.
Well, is getting mad about it making you
hit the shots any better?
No.
Right.
No.
So the idea is, it's not that, again, no one is emotionless.
It's not possible.
But when I think the stoics are trying, that's why I said,
it's about being less emotional, not emotionless.
But what we're trying to cultivate
is more of an even key.
I imagine when you were younger, missing shots hurt you more than it does now because
you've taken so many more shots. You have a better sense of rhythms, slumps are inevitable.
You also cultivate, you know whether it was a good shot or not, whether it goes in, regardless
of whether it goes in. And so it's not that you don't feel it You've got to feel it. A person who doesn't care about the game,
there's a sort of sitting there like a monk
that's probably not going to do great.
But what you're understanding is that,
hey, by getting upset about this, by getting mad about it,
worst case scenario, you're getting it technical,
you're giving points to the other team,
or you're making stupid mistakes
because you're not in your head.
Like there's a reason we talk trash, right?
We talk trash because we want to provoke the emotions
of the other person because we know when they're emotional,
they're not as good as they can be.
So we got to understand that that process
is also happening to us, right?
And the more of an even keel,
the more equanimity or poise we can have, 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.
BedMGM is the king of online casinos. Enjoy Las Vegas excitement at your fingertips. Play
popular live games like Blackjack, Baccarat, and Roulette. Leap into a world filled with slots,
live dealers, popular table games, and much more. Download the app today and see for yourself why BedMGM is the king of casinos.
Please play responsibly.