The Daily Stoic - How To Astonish and Inspire For Centuries | What's in Your Way Is The Way

Episode Date: June 26, 2023

In Walter Isaacson’s wonderful biography of Leonardo Da Vinci, he spends a lot of time dissecting and exploring the ideas in Da Vinci’s notebooks. As Isaacson observed of Da Vinci’s lif...elong habit of journaling: “Five hundred years later, Leonardo’s notebooks are around to astonish and inspire us. Fifty years from now, our own notebooks, if we work up the initiative to start them, will be around to astonish and inspire our grandchildren, unlike our tweets and Facebook posts.”Paper, Isaacson says, is one of the best technologies ever invented.---And in today's excerpt from The Daily Stoic Journal, Ryan expounds on the seminal Stoic idea that shaped his book The Obstacle Is The Way. ✉️ 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, including the leather-bound edition of The Daily Stoic.📱 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.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hey, prime members, you can listen to the Daily Stoic Podcast early and add free on Amazon music. Download the app today. Welcome to the Daily Stoic Podcast. Each day we bring you a meditation inspired by the ancient Stoic's illustrated with stories from history, current events, and literature to help you be better at what you do. And at the beginning of the week, we try to do a deeper dive, setting a kind of stoic intention for the week, something to meditate on, something to think on,
Starting point is 00:00:31 something to leave you with, to journal about, whatever it is you're happy to be doing. So let's get into it. How to astonish and inspire for centuries. In Walter Isaacson's wonderful biography of Leonardo da Vinci, he spends a lot of time dissecting and exploring the ideas in Da Vinci's notebooks. As Isaacson observed a Da Vinci's lifelong habit of journaling 500 years later, Leonardo's notebooks are around to astonish and inspire us. 50 years from now, he says our own notebooks,
Starting point is 00:01:17 if we work up the initiative to start them, will be around to astonish and inspire our grandchildren unlike our tweets and Facebook posts. Paper, Isaacson said, is one of the best technologies ever invented. Marcus Aurelius' paper journal survived to us today and remained best red and print. Much of what was in those journals was influenced by the handwritten notes that Rousticus took while sitting in and listening to the lectures of Epochetus, the simple letters that Seneca penned by hand to a friend, also, endure.
Starting point is 00:01:51 And it's remarkable that the contents of these enduring pieces of paper would fill the journals and commonplace books and published works of writers over the centuries, and will continue to, for centuries, more to come. Stop wasting your time tweeting and texting and snapchatting or at least steal some of that time to produce your own notebooks. Create something that if the centuries aren't astonished and inspired by, at least your family will be. As Isaacson said again, they'll be around for 50 years for your grandchildren and great-grandchildren. Take his advice, get a notebook, and start writing.
Starting point is 00:02:32 My, here, let me grab it off the shelf here. This is my Daily Stoic Journal, rat in the new Daily Stoic Journal leather cover. It's his make time on the front, and then in the back it has epictetus every day and night keep thoughts like these at hand, write them, read them aloud, talk to yourself, and others about them. I think it's really awesome.
Starting point is 00:02:58 We use this great tannery in Red Wing, Minnesota. They've been making leather goods for 150 years. It fits the daily stoic journal exclusively in the US and the UK edition. It's got these embossed stamped logos. The journal swaps out every year, but the cover stays the same. And if you want to start a journaling habit, you can bundle the cover and the journal itself for a pretty steep discount, it's like 50% off. It's a limited sale, but you can check it out at store.dailystoic.com or I'll link to
Starting point is 00:03:33 it in today's show notes. Life can get you down. I'm no stranger to that. When I find things are piling up, I'm struggling to deal with something. Obviously, I use my journal, obviously I turn to stosism, but I also turn to my therapist, which I've had for a long time and has helped me through a bunch of stuff. And because I'm so busy and I live out in the country, I do therapy remote, so I don't have to drive somewhere. And that's where today's sponsor comes in. Tox space makes it easy to find a therapist that you like.
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Starting point is 00:04:52 Even the most powerful and lucky of us are not exempt from this reality, but we have a super power at our hands through Stoic philosophy in that our purposes, our intentions, our attitudes can adapt to any conditions to find a way forward. The stoics talk about acting with a reserve clause that allows us to reconsider and set a new course of action if needed, and Marcus Aurelius tells us that any obstacle can actually become raw material for a new purpose. So that's what you should think about today in this week.
Starting point is 00:05:27 How might the obstacles you're facing reveal a new path? And this is from the Daily Stoic Journal, 366 days of writing and reflection on the art of living. Every week we have a sort of a daily meditation. And we've got three quotes from Marcus Aurelius along these lines today. While it's true that someone can impede our actions, they can't impede our intentions or our attitudes, which have the power of being conditional and adaptable. For the mind adapts and converts any obstacle to its actions into a means of achieving it,
Starting point is 00:06:00 and that which is the obstacle to action is turned to advance action. The obstacle on the path becomes the way. That's Meditations 520. Marcus also says in 835, just as nature turns to its own purpose, any obstacle or any opposition sets its place in the destined order and co-ops it. So every rational person can convert any obstacle into the raw material for their own purpose.
Starting point is 00:06:28 And then meditations 832, so clearly he thinks about this a lot. He says, you must build up your life action by action and be content if each one achieves its goal as far as possible, and no one can keep you from this. But there will be some external obstacle, Perhaps he says, but no obstacle to acting with just a self-control and wisdom. But what if some area of my action is tormented? Well, gladly accept the obstacle for what it is and shift your attention to what is given. And another action will immediately take its place, one that better fits the life you are building. And as you know, this is what I built the obstacles the way around
Starting point is 00:07:06 these ideas. These ideas, but let me read you Gregory Hayes' translation in that same line 520 because it's obviously been so instrumental to me. And I think Hayes does it quite well also. Let's see here. He says, and it's interesting, he's clearly referring Marcus to a specific kind of obstacle, difficult people. In a sense, people are our proper occupation. This is Meditations 520. Our job is to do them good and put up with them. But when they obstruct our proper tasks,
Starting point is 00:07:39 they become irrelevant to us, like the sun, wind, or animals. Our actions may be impeded by them, but there can be no impeding our intentions or our dispositions, because we can accommodate and adapt. The mind adapts and converts to its own purposes, the obstacle to our acting, the impediment to action advances action, what stands in the way, becomes the way.
Starting point is 00:08:03 And then let's look at the Robin Waterfield translation of the same line. All right, there's five, 20. From one point of view, nothing is more proper to me than a human being. And so far as it's my job to do people good and tolerate them. But in so far as some people threaten my proper work,
Starting point is 00:08:26 I count a human being as just another indifferent, no less than the sun or the wind or a wild animal. These things may impede some of my activities, but they can't impede my impulses or my state of mind because I have powers of reservation and adaptation. The mind can adapt and alter every impediment to action to serve its purpose, something that might have hindered a task contributes to it instead, and something that
Starting point is 00:08:49 was in obstacle on the road helps you on your way. And then here's Waterfield's note. He says, again, Marcus stresses the independence of the mind and the possibility of seeing the world in a positive light. So it doesn't matter which translation you read, the message is the same. Stuff happens, stuff gets in our way, but it presents us the opportunity to do something different. So in this sense, the obstacle is the way it's not that, you know, life erects this wall in front of you in the ways through that wall. It's that when the door shuts, a window opens. It's that when the door shuts a window opens, it's that when you want it everything to go well and then someone screws it up, now it's a chance to
Starting point is 00:09:31 practice patience, now it's a chance to practice forgiveness, now it's a chance to start over, now it's a chance to you know, extricate yourself from this toxic relationship, whatever it is, right? What Marcus is saying is that everything that happens in life, every obstacle, as maddening and frustrating and painful as they might be, they are opportunities to practice a different virtue, that virtue is always the way and that nothing stops us from being able to do that. I just love that passage so much. If I had the time, I'd grab the Pierre Hadoo chapter on this very idea, which also helped inspire the obstacles away. He talks about sort of the art of turning obstacles upside down. To me, this is a central practice in
Starting point is 00:10:15 stosism. It's why I've got a tattooed on my arm. It's why I wrote a book about it. It's why we talk about it so much. It's a idea of a more faulty, we accept. And then we use what's happened to our advantage. That's the essence of stoicism. I hope that inspires you a little bit today. People are our proper occupation. We tolerate them, we put up with them. And all the obstacles they roll into our way, all the problems they cause us,
Starting point is 00:10:39 are actually not problems but opportunities to practice. The very virtues of courage, temperance, justice, and wisdom, that's what we're doing here. And by the way, we do have the new leather bound edition of The Obstacles, The Way, which comes with The Obstacles, The Way Challenge coin, as well. Really proud of this thing. You can check that out at dailystoke.com slash obstacle leather. Hey, Prime Members, you can listen to 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.
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