The Daily Stoic - Embrace Your Weirdness | Forgive Them Because They Don't Know

Episode Date: July 19, 2024

Embrace who you really are. Embrace what makes you unique. Embrace your weirdness. Because chances are it’s special.🎙️ Listen to Rainn Wilson’s interview on The Daily Stoic or watch ...it on YouTube📓 Grab your own leather bound signed edition of The Daily Stoic! Check it out at the Daily Stoic Store: https://store.dailystoic.com/🎟 Ryan Holiday is going on tour! Grab tickets at ryanholiday.net/tour✉️ Want Stoic wisdom delivered to your inbox daily? Sign up for the FREE Daily Stoic email at https://dailystoic.com/dailyemail🏛 Get Stoic inspired books, medallions, and prints to remember these lessons at the Daily Stoic Store: https://store.dailystoic.com/📱 Follow us:  Instagram, Twitter, YouTube, TikTok, and FacebookSee 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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Starting point is 00:00:00 Wondery Plus subscribers can listen to the daily Stoic early and ad free right now. Just join Wondery Plus in the Wondery app or on Apple podcasts. I've been writing books for a long time now and one of the things I've noticed is how every year, every book that I do, I'm just here in New York putting right thing right now out. What a bigger percentage of my audience is listening to them in audiobooks, specifically on Audible. I've had people had me sign their phones, sign their phone case because they're like I've listened to all your audiobooks here and my sons they love audiobooks we've been doing it in the car to get them off their screens because audible helps your imagination soar. It helps you
Starting point is 00:00:35 read efficiently, find time to read when maybe you can't have a physical book in front of you and then it also lets you discover new kinds of books, re-listen to books you've already read from exciting new narrators. You can explore bestsellers, new releases. My new book is up, plus thousands of included audio books and originals, all with an Audible membership.
Starting point is 00:00:54 You can sign up right now for a free 30-day Audible trial and try your first audio book for free. You'll get right thing right now, totally for free. Visit audible.ca to sign up. for free, visit audible.ca to sign up. Welcome to the Daily Stoic podcast. On Friday, we do double duty, not just reading our daily meditation, but also reading a passage from the Daily Stoic, my book, 366 Meditations on Wisdom, Perseverance in the Art of Living, which I wrote with my wonderful collaborator, translator, and literary agent, Stephen Hanselman.
Starting point is 00:01:27 So today, we'll give you a quick meditation from the Stoics with some analysis from me, and then we'll send you out into the world to turn these words into works. Embrace your weirdness. The Stoics knew that each of us was born inherently unique. Well before an understanding of the science of DNA, they implicitly grasped that never before and never again will our combinations of genetics exist, that we are singular. And that one of the worst things a human being can do
Starting point is 00:02:05 with this rarest of rarities is to give it up, to not be our singular selves. The great Rainn Wilson was on the Daily Stoke podcast recently and he told this story of a painful period in which he tried to be someone he wasn't. In 1995, Rainn got cast in his first Broadway play. In his head, he had this preconceived notion of a Broadway actor,
Starting point is 00:02:25 very professional, very serious, very matter of fact. Rain tried to be that person, as he explains on the podcast. And guess what? I sucked. The pressure, the tension, the perfectionism just kind of rendered me really tense and not pleasant. And I just was really stuck in my head and lost and, and I suffered so much. There's nothing worse than doing a play that you know you suck in because you have to do it for four or five months and you're doing eight shows a week. You show up and you're like, fuck, I'm gonna suck again. Damn it. When I finished the play, I said, never again. Never again am I gonna do that.
Starting point is 00:03:10 I'm gonna find my authentic voice as an actor. I'm quirky, I'm kind of weird. I'm gonna embrace that. I'm not gonna be trying, try to be something to please someone else. That's a stoic thing too, right? So I'm not going to jump through all these hoops to try and please other people, but I gotta be me, baby.
Starting point is 00:03:31 And I fired my agents and I really just changed how I was as an actor at that point. Not long after he made that decision to embrace being himself, Reign landed not only the biggest role of his career, but what would prove to be one of the most iconic characters in the history of television, Dwight in The Office.
Starting point is 00:03:50 The point is, is that I never would have gotten Dwight in The Office had I not gone through that suffering on that play on Broadway. Because finding Dwight was embracing my nerdy weirdness. And if I hadn't totally embraced that, I never would have gotten the role of Dwight. Be you, be the only one of you in the whole world. That's where the fun is.
Starting point is 00:04:16 You don't have to fake anything. That's where the value is. When we are like everyone else, we are replaceable by definition. Embrace who you really are, embrace what makes you unique, embrace your weirdness, because chances are it's special. Hey, it's Ryan. This is the July 19th entry in the Daily Stoic,
Starting point is 00:04:43 366 Meditations on Wisdom, Perseverance, and the Art of Living. Forgive them because they don't know. This is Marcus Aurelius' Meditations 7.6. He says, as Plato said, every soul is deprived of truth against its will. The same holds true for justice, self-control, goodwill to others, and every similar virtue.
Starting point is 00:05:03 It's essential to constantly keep this in your mind for it will make you more gentle to all. And I tell a biblical story here. I think it's interesting to think that, you know, Seneca and Jesus are born roughly at the same time, both live in the same empire, both come from provinces of the Roman Empire, both were enormously popular philosophers in their own life
Starting point is 00:05:22 and both are ultimately put to death. You can read Tacitus and hear of the death of Jesus and you can also read Tacitus and hear the Roman Empire, both were enormously popular philosophers in their own life, and both are ultimately put to death. You can read Tacitus and hear of the death of Jesus, and you can also read Tacitus and hear of the death of Seneca. As he wound his way up the Via de la Rosso on the top of Calvary Hill, Jesus, or Christus, as he would have been known to Seneca
Starting point is 00:05:38 and other Roman contemporaries, he had suffered immensely. He had been beaten and flogged and stabbed, forced to bear his own cross, and was set to be crucified on it next to two common criminals. There he watched the soldiers roll dice to see who would get to keep his clothes, listened as the people sneered and taunted him. Whatever your religious inclinations, the words that Jesus spoke next, considering they came as he was subjected to unimaginable human suffering.
Starting point is 00:06:06 Send chills down your spine. Jesus looked upward and said, Simply, Father, Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do. This is the same truth that Plato spoke centuries earlier, that Marcus spoke almost two centuries after Jesus. Other Christians must have spoken this truth as they were cruelly executed by the Romans under Marcus' reign. Forgive them, they are deprived of truth. They wouldn't do this if they weren't. Use this knowledge to be gentle and gracious." I think that's something that Marcus realizes. He goes, hey, not everyone has the privilege and wealth and power that I have, but also they haven't been availed of stoic philosophy.
Starting point is 00:06:45 I mean, let's go to the opening passage in book two of meditations, right? The famous one that supposedly Marcus writing people off for being annoying and obnoxious and awful, right? What does Marcus say? He lists all the frustrating things they're gonna do. And he says, why are they like this? They are like this because they can't tell good from evil.
Starting point is 00:07:05 It says, but I have seen the beauty of good and the ugliness of evil and have recognized that the wrongdoer has a nature related to my own, not of the same blood or birth, but of the same mind, possessing a share of the divine. So none of them can hurt me. It says no one can implicate me in ugliness, nor can I feel angry at my relative or hate him.
Starting point is 00:07:24 We were born to work together like feet and hands and eyes, like two rows of teeth, upper and lower. To obstruct each other is unnatural. To feel anger at someone, to turn your back on him, these are obstructions." He's saying forgive them. He's saying understand them. He even talks about forgiveness in meditations where he says like, remember when you have acted like that. And then of course, there is a whole chapter in part three of the new book, Right Thing Right Now, which I hope you have read. Just came out, so maybe you're not to part three,
Starting point is 00:07:56 you'll get to it, but I'll give you a little teaser. On page 275, I tell a story about forgiveness because it's such an important biblical concept 275, I tell a story about forgiveness, because it's such an important biblical concept and an important stoic concept and an important virtuous concept. I tell the story of James Lawson, who meets and tries to forgive Martin Luther King Jr.'s assassin, James Earl Ray.
Starting point is 00:08:19 And he gets asked by Ray to minister to him. He asks him eventually to officiate his wedding. And Lawson is asking his family at dinner if he should do this. And as I write it says, it was a short conversation. Almost before he could finish, Lawson's 17 year old son was answering,
Starting point is 00:08:35 well, his son said not even needing to look up from his food. If you believe all this stuff, you've been preaching all these years, he'll do it. And I say, it's important to note that Jesus didn't just preach forgiveness on that one occasion on the cross. Before his death, he was asked about forgiveness by Peter. Knowing that forgiveness was important, Peter asked just how many times he should forgive his brother. Was it one time for one mistake? Should he forgive him seven times? I do not say to you up to seven times," Jesus replied, but up to 77 times. And in fact,
Starting point is 00:09:07 according to some translations, Jesus actually said 70 times seven. But even this understates it because the whole basis of Christianity is that because God has forgiven each person totally and completely, a Christian must in turn do the same. And then I say, whatever your spirituality, the same bargain stands, someone kind, someone generous, someone we didn't even know has forgiven us at least once. In fact, life has given you countless second chances, chance after chance after chance. Justice would have cut you off a long time ago,
Starting point is 00:09:37 but here you are. We carry that debt now and so we must forgive others. Better yet, we have the power to enrich ourselves in the world by actively investing this forgiveness wherever possible, wherever we have the opportunity to provide grace to someone who has trespassed against us. I go on, there's another great story of Marcus and forgiveness. The point is, let's practice a little forgiveness today. Let's give some grace, not expect it, but give it. That's today's lesson. I hope all of you are well. By the time you are listening to this,
Starting point is 00:10:06 on my way to Australia, where I am doing those two talks. So if you wanna see me in Sydney or Melbourne, you can grab tickets at ryanholiday.net slash tour. And then I'm also doing some talks in Vancouver and Toronto, Dublin, London, Rotterdam, bunch of dates at ryanholiday.net slash tour. I hope to see you all there. But I am heading to Australia first,
Starting point is 00:10:31 which I'm very excited about. And if I don't see you there, I forgive you, but not really, just kidding. Talk soon. If you like The Daily Stoic and thanks for listening, you can listen early and ad free right now by joining Wondery Plus in the Wondery app or on Apple podcasts. Prime members can listen ad free on Amazon Music. And before you go, would you tell us about yourself by filling out a short survey on Wondery.com slash survey.
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