The Daily Stoic - History is One Damned Thing After Another | Do Not Be Deceived By Fortune
Episode Date: September 8, 2022By the time Marcus Aurelius took over as emperor, he had not had an easy life. He had lost his father at age three. He had lost a beloved tutor. His lifepath was upended by Hadrian’s select...ion. He had 14 children during his 30-year marriage to Faustina. And then of course, in order to ascend to the purple, he had to lose his mentor Hadrian and his beloved stepfather Antoninus.📕Pre-order Ryan Holiday's new book "Discipline Is Destiny" and get exclusive pre-order bonuses at https://dailystoic.com/preorder ✉️ 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 Facebook 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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Hey, prime members, you can listen to the Daily Stoke Podcast early and add free on Amazon
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Welcome to another episode of the Daily Stoke Podcast.
On Thursdays, we do double duty, not just reading our daily meditation, but also reading
a passage from the book, The Daily Stokeic, 366 Meditations on Wisdom,
Perseverance in the Art of Living,
which I wrote with my wonderful co-author
and collaborator, Steve Enhancelman.
And so today, we'll give you a quick meditation
from one of the Stoics, from Epictetus Marks,
Relius, Seneca, then some analysis for me.
And then we send you out into the world
to do your best to turn these words into works.
Hi, I'm David Brown, the host of Wundery's podcast business wars.
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By the time Marcus Aurelius took over as emperor he had not had an easy life. He had lost his father at age 3, lost a beloved tutor.
His life path was upended by Hadrian's selection.
He had 14 children during his 30-year marriage to his wife, Faustina.
And then, of course, in order to ascend to the purple, he had to lose his beloved Hadrian.
What came next, we've talked about before, a plague, floods, an invasion, a coup, a civil war.
He didn't meet with a good fortune that he deserved
one ancient historian reflected,
but you might also say he met with exactly what he ought
to have expected.
The financial writer Morgan Howell,
who's wonderful book, The Psychology of Money,
we recommend, and who was on the podcast recently,
once described history as one damned thing after another.
And what is history made up of?
Life. Life is one damned thing after another.
Your parents get divorced, you fall and break your leg.
You move across the country for a job that doesn't work out.
One of your kids has ADHD, the economy crashes, your neighbor is a jerk,
you have high blood pressure, you find out you're allergic to dairy,
it's one thing after another after another.
The stoic say that we must first be mentally and emotionally prepared for this.
If this parade of events surprises you, it's your fault, because history already predicted
it.
The second is that we must train for it physically.
Markis was strong, even though he was often sick.
Kadeppek Titas have endured the one thing after another that was Roman slavery,
torture, exile, deprivation, if he had not been tough as hell.
Client these two is training as a boxer would have been crucial to surviving poverty as well as the squabbles of the philosophical life.
What about you? Are you ready? Are you prepared? Are you trained?
Because as insane as the last couple of years have been, one thing is certain.
The years to come will be one, two, three, four damned things after another.
On and on.
Till the end.
Do not be deceived by fortune.
This is the September 8th entry in the Daily Stoic.
And I'm reading to you today from the Daily Stoic, and I'm reading to you today from the
Daily Stoic 366 meditations on wisdom, perseverance, and the art of living by yours truly.
I'm a co-author and translator, Steve Enhancelman.
You can get signed copies, by the way, in the Daily Stoic store, over a million copies
of the Daily Stoic in print now.
It's been just such a lovely experience to watch it.
It's been more than 250 weeks,
consecutive weeks on the best cell,
it's just an awesome experience.
But I'll be checking out.
We have a premium leather edition
at store.dailystoke.com as well.
But let's get on with today's reading.
And our quote today comes to us from Sennaka
in his letter on consolation to Hellvia.
That's his mother.
It's a beautiful essay. You can read it in on theation to Hellvia, that's his mother. It's a beautiful, as said, you can read it
in on the shortness of life,
one of my favorite little collections
of Seneca's writings, but we'll get to the quote now.
He says, no one is crushed by fortune
unless they are first deceived by her.
Those who aren't pompous in good times
don't have their bubbles burst with change.
Against either circumstance, the stable person keeps their rational soul invincible for it's precisely in the good times don't have their bubbles burst with change. Against either circumstance, the stable person
keeps their rational soul invincible,
for it's precisely in the good times
that they prove their strength against adversity.
In 41 AD, Senika was exiled from Rome to Corsica.
For what exactly were not sure,
but the rumors were that he had an affair
with the sister of the Emperor.
Shortly thereafter, he sent a letter to his mother
seeking to reassure her and comfort her in her grief,
her grief being that she missed her son.
But in many ways, he must have been speaking to himself
as well, scolding himself a little
for his unexpected twist.
He was taking pretty hard.
He had managed to achieve some measure of political
and social success.
Maybe he chased some pleasures of the flesh, but now he and his family were dealing with the
consequences, as we all must bear for our behavior and the risks we take. How would he respond?
How would he deal with it? What the very least his instincts were to comfort his mother instead of
simply bemoaning his suffering. Though some other letters show that Seneca begged and lobbied for his return to Rome and
to power, a request that was eventually granted, he does seem to have borne the pain and
disgrace of exile fairly well.
The philosophy that he long studied prepared him for this kind of adversity and gave him
the determination and patience he needed to wait it out. When he found his fortune restored
as he returned to power, philosophy prevented him from taking it for granted or becoming
dependent on it. This was good because fortune had another turn in store for him. When the
new emperor turned his wrath on Seneca, philosophy found him ready and prepared once again.
It's attention, right? Seneca says we suffer more in imagination than in reality. You don't want to just be thinking
of all the terrible things that could happen. You don't want to be biting your nails and
anticipation of this or that. And yet, if you are naive, if you trust in fortune, you're
setting yourself up for pain. He says, never forget a fortune's habits of behaving exactly
as she pleases.
Yes, as we become successful, we get things we start to go, this is how it should be, I earned this, I made this, it's mine. And maybe a lot of that is true.
If you're not the ultimate decider, something can take that from you. Unfairness can take it from you.
And justice can take it from you. Tragedy can take it from you. The emperor can take it from you, tragedy can take it from you, the emperor can take it from you.
So, if you are deceived by fortune that this is yours now, that this is the new normal,
that this is stable, you have bought into an illusion, and that you can be disabused of
that illusion at any moment.
How painful will that disillusion be?
My favorite line is an invisible man.
It says, how does it feel to be free of illusion?
This is painful and empty.
When we build our lives around these illusions,
around the sense that this is how it should be,
all is right in the world, you are begging for life
to visit some humility upon you.
So you have to be careful.
You have to be aware, we have to practice,
we have to prepare, we have to train,
we can't take any of it for granted.
None of it is nearly as stable as it appears.
That's what Sennaqa realized, not just at this exile, but early on his life when tuberculosis
sent him to Egypt to convalesci.
Nero turned to be out to be insane.
That's what life does.
It reminds us.
It doesn't go the way we want it. And I think
it's problematic how often we say things like this is unprecedented. This is not normal.
This has never happened. This has always happened. This is always how it's going to be normal
is crazy. Normal is chaos. Normal is sudden reversal. I was just reading Morgan Howell's
the psychology of money and he has this line and there unexpected things happen all the time or
things that have never happened before happen all the time. That's the wisdom of what Senica
is trying to say there. That's what we prepare for train in this philosophy for
to be ready for precisely those kind of events. So when things go wrong, we can be the person,
imagine again, and if you haven't read on the shortness of life, pick up the copy there and the paint of porch, if
you could, I'll link to it in today's episode, right? There's something sweet about the
fact that Santa is the one exiled, but he's writing the consolation to his mother. So
his mother saying, you got this kiddo, it'll be all right. He's saying, mom, I'm okay.
It's gonna be alright.
He's comforting the people who are grieving
and missing him.
That's what this discipline of philosophy can be.
That's what Senaqa practice for.
And that's what we're working towards.
I'll leave that here today.
And then just remember, if you wanna pre-order
the new book Discipline is Destiny, which has plenty of Senaqa, and you can do that at dailystoke you want to pre-order the new book discipline is Destiny,
which has plenty of Seneca, and you can do that at DailyStoic.com slash pre-order.
It got a bunch of awesome bonuses in there, including some bonus chapters.
And we've even got some signed copies. I'll sign your copy.
If you pick up that order at DailyStoic.com slash pre-order, really proud of this new book.
Self-control, that's what Seneca was embodying there there in his stoic, lowercase stoic handling of a terrible injustice dealt to him.
And I hope to give you some of that strength too. DailyStoak.com slash preorder for discipline
is destiny.
It's not that life is short, Seneca says.
It's that we waste a lot of it.
The practice of Memento Mori, the meditation on death, is one of the most powerful and eye-opening
things that there is.
You built this Memento Mori calendar for Dioistote to illustrate that exact idea that your life
in the best case scenario is 4,000 weeks.
Are you going to let those weeks slip by or are you going to seize them? The act of
unrolling this calendar, putting it on your wall, and every single week that bubble is filled in,
that black mark is marking it off forever. Have something to show, not just for your years,
but for every single dot that you filled in
that you really lived that week,
that you made something of it.
You can check it out at dailystoke.com slash MN calendar. Hey, prime members, you can listen to the Daily Stoic early and add free on Amazon music.
Download the Amazon music app today, or you can listen early and add free with Wondery
Plus in Apple podcasts.
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You never know if you're just gonna end up on page six or do
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When Brittany's fans form the free Brittany movement
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it angered some fans, a lot of them.
It's a story of two young women who had their choices
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And it's about a movement to save a superstar, which set its sights upon anyone who failed
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