The Daily Stoic - How To Balance Ego With Striving | LinkedIn Talk
Episode Date: April 28, 2024📔 Pre-order your copy of Right Thing Right Now: Good Values. Good Character. Good Deeds. at dailystoic.com/justice.✉️ Sign up for the Daily Stoic email: https://dailysto...ic.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.
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Hello, I'm Emily, one of the hosts of Terribly Famous, the show that takes you inside the
lives of our biggest celebrities.
Some of them hit the big time overnight, some had to plug away for years, but in our latest
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A life of extreme privilege that was mapped out from the start, but left him struggling
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Yes, it's Prince Harry.
You might think you know everything about him, but trust me, there's even more.
We follow Harry and the obsessive, all-consuming relationship of his life, not with Meghan,
but the British tabloid press.
Hounded and harassed, Harry is taking on an institution almost every bit as powerful as
his own royal family. Follow Terribly Famous wherever you listen to podcasts or listen
early and ad-free on Wandery Plus on Apple Podcasts or the Wander We App.
I'm Alice Levine.
And I'm Matt Ford.
And we're the presenters of British Scandal.
And in our latest series, Hitler's Angel, we tell the story of scandalous beauty,
Diana Mosley, British aristocrat, Mitford sister and fascist sympathiser.
Like so many great British stories, it starts at a lavish garden party. Diana meets the dashing fascist Oswald Moseley.
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It's not a classic rom-com story, but when she falls in love with Moseley, she's on
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Welcome to the weekend edition of the Daily Stoic podcast. On Sundays, we take a
deeper dive into these ancient topics with excerpts from the Stoic texts, audiobooks that we like here, recommend
here at Daily Stoic, and other long-form wisdom that you can chew on on this relaxing weekend.
We hope this helps shape your understanding of this philosophy, and most importantly,
that you're able to apply it to your actual life. Thank you for listening.
Hey, it's Ryan. Welcome to another weekend episode
of the Daily Stoke podcast.
So in 2017, I gave a talk at LinkedIn.
I was talking about the ideas in ego is the enemy.
Seems utterly insane to me that that talk was seven years ago,
but I guess it was.
I've been doing this a long time.
I wonder what I would change if I was doing this talk again.
I mean, I think I'm better if I'm like,
putting my ego aside, I think every time you do a talk,
you get a little bit better.
People ask about stage fright, whatever.
You get less scared because you've done it more times.
But every time I talk about the material,
I discover something new.
Certainly I've learned a lot.
I've had my ego humbled in many ways.
But I do think the ideas in this talk hold up pretty well,
which is why I wanted to bring it to you.
So we're bringing this one out of the vault.
It's just me talking ego is the enemy,
part of a leadership speaker series
that LinkedIn was doing back in the day.
LinkedIn's been an awesome sponsor of the podcast
over the years as well.
And I think there's some good lessons in here.
One of the things I talk about is Howard Hughes,
who I think we have some modern day analogs.
When I was writing that, I was
thinking mostly about Doug Charney, the founder of American Apparel, talking about Howard
Hughes as a way to talk about Dove and what I'd learned and seen there, because I'd written
the book in 2014 and 2015 as American Apparel was imploding. But it's funny, I'm going back
to those very ideas right now because I'm writing about another entrepreneur,
I don't know if I should say yet,
who's had a similar arc for the Wisdom book,
which is the one I'm working on now,
Justice, right thing right now.
Good values, good character, and good deeds
is coming out in June.
You can pre-order that now.
That's the third book in the Stoke Virtue series.
The fourth will be coming out whenever I finish this thing.
It was just funny how it comes full circle now
for seven plus years.
I've been thinking about these ideas.
I didn't even know I was doing the Virtue Series then,
but some of the ideas I was researching,
talking about then,
have ended up being in the Justice Book.
They're gonna be in the Wisdom Book.
And this is just what I do.
And so I'm excited to bring this one out to the vault.
I hope you enjoy it.
Thanks to LinkedIn for having me.
Talk soon.
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Thank you. How's everyone doing?
Good?
All right.
Well, we'll just get into it.
So typically, I start my talks with this question, right, which is who the hell is this person?
Richelle did a very nice job introducing me, but I sort of go through it.
But so this is me in college.
I was 19.
I dropped out to work for an author.
I really wanted to be a writer.
That was my dream.
And I sort of thought the way that you become a writer is
you study under a writer. So I worked for Robert Greene, who wrote the 48 Laws of Power.
I worked on a number of his books with him, sort of learning the craft of what writing
is. And then through Robert, I came on as a strategist at a company called American
Apparel, which is at the time one of the biggest fashion companies
in the world.
By the time I was maybe 21 or 22,
I was the director of marketing.
And then I wrote my first book while I was there,
which is sort of an expose of the media system,
just to sort of show you maybe how ego
can go to an author's head, right?
This is the picture of me in college,
and it somehow becomes the cover of the book, which makes me look much cooler than I actually look.
You know, the pen becomes a cigarette and then there's a monster, I guess, and all these
things. So anyway, so I wrote my first book. It does really well. It's got my face on the
cover. Things are going well. I read another book a few years later, which also did well.
And then I'm still at American Apparel,
and the wheels start to come off a little bit,
both for me and for the company.
This is probably the nicest headline
that you could find about Dove and American Apparel.
An abrupt fall from grace.
It ends up he's fired by the board of directors,
there's a hostile takeover, it fails,
there's a lot of controversial media about it,
the company ends up going bankrupt twice,
the 10,000 employees that work there no longer have jobs.
It's sadly kind of a timeless story, right?
Really high-flying successful company
suddenly isn't so high-flying and successful anymore.
Lots of people, again, historically this happens, right?
You've got John DeLorean, brilliant engineer, inventor.
You might have seen the car in Back to the Future.
He actually tries to invent like the Tesla model
of disrupting the major car makers.
He makes on paper a great car,
but actually the DeLorean would be
like the worst possible car you could own. Not only does he run the company
in the ground, but then at its sort of lowest point, he thinks that he can sort
of, he thinks he can refund to the company with a 50 million dollar cocaine
deal. It's actually an FBI sting. It does not end well as you can imagine. Of
course you've got Richard Nixon,
right? He wins re-election in a landslide. He can't stop attacking what he sort of refers
to as his enemies. He ends up overreaching. My favorite part is just how big his head
is. It almost looks like it's like Photoshopped onto his body. Howard Hughes, another sort of brilliant strategic mind, an inventor, a sort of a courageous,
bold aviator, but actually Hughes Aircraft is one of the worst-run companies in history.
He makes so much money because of some of the patents and sort of monopolies that he
has that he's able to fail over and over and over again.
We sort of see in Howard Hughes a trajectory of what ego can do.
I'll sort of present this one without comment,
but maybe we're seeing some of the same
that we're seeing maybe history repeat itself again.
But so anyway, so this is the sort of timeless problem
of ego as you become more successful,
as you start to achieve the things
that you're setting out to achieve.
We often become our own worst enemy. Cyril Connolly, one of my favorite writers, he has this line,
he says, ego sucks us down like the law of gravity. And so what I wanted to talk
about today is the way that that happens and of course how maybe we can resist
this gravitational pull so we don't fail so catastrophically. These are some notes
I was at, I was actually at American Apparel when all this sort of stuff was happening.
And I remember I was in the parking lot with my editor and we were talking on the phone
and sort of came to me this phrase, the idea that ego is the enemy.
And not only is it the enemy, but that wherever we happen to be in life, and I would say that
we're in sort of one of three phases at any given point, we're either aspiring to do something,
we're achieving success in some way, or we're experiencing failure and adversity.
And so the idea is that ego is the enemy
of each one of these phases,
and so a book starts as an idea,
and then it becomes sort of a,
you sort of backfill in all the material.
So this is the breakthrough in the book.
So we're either aspiring, we're succeeding, or we're failing.
So we're at one of these three phases,
and we're sort of going back and forth
between them all the time.
We succeed at something,
and then we aspire to do something more.
We fail at something, and then we have to aspire again.
We succeed at something, and then we bring failure to that,
or we experience adversity because of something we've done,
and it goes on and on and on. And so we'll start with aspiring. I think the first way you
sort of combat ego when you, is early on, right? Ideally you want to nip this sort
of stuff in the bud. You want to prevent ego from taking root too early and I
think part of the way that you do that is by taking what they call in the
martial arts the beginner's mind or the student mindset. The story I tell to illustrate this is the story of a heavy
metal guitarist. This is him here, Kirk Hammett. He's in a band called Exodus.
They're an okay metal band. And then he's chosen, he's chosen to replace, actually
they're a San Francisco heavy metal band at the time, he's chosen to replace a guy
named Dave Mustaine in a band called Metallica. Metallica is still an underground band at the time. They're definitely going places. This
is like being drafted, let's say maybe into the minor leagues at the time. We've got a
very clear path to the majors. And what does he do? Does he celebrate? Does he go out and
buy a nice car? Does he party? No. What he does is he hires a guitar teacher. He hires
a musician in Berkeley named Joe Satriani, who himself would go on to be one of the greatest guitar
players of all time.
And they work for almost two years.
Even though he's a professional musician,
he has a guitar teacher.
And what Satriani would say is that, him, it was pretty good.
But what he'd never really learned how to do
was connect everything together.
So it was this sort of process of he would get homework,
he would have to go work on the homework,
he would have to come back having practiced those lessons
each and every week.
Satyayani actually says to him,
like look if you don't do the work,
don't bother coming back.
And so here we have someone submitting
to this sort of master apprentice model
or submitting to the student mindset
at early on enough in his career
that it's preventing ego from taking hold.
And this is what you do, working for Robert Greene,
it's a similar thing for me.
There's nothing I could do
that would ever really impress Robert in any major way
because he'd already done all this before.
So at best you're getting a sort of good job
and then you've gotta go,
it's this sort of measuring yourself against someone
who's so far in advance of you that it's inherently
humbling and it's preventing ego from coming through.
Epictetus is saying, look, it's impossible for a person
to learn that which they think they already know.
So one of the problems early on in a career or in a job
or in a trajectory is we think we're really good, And as a result of this, that's about as good as we end up becoming. So when you
think you know everything, in some ways you're right because you don't learn
anything more. Socrates, right, is considered to be very wise because he knew what he
didn't know. So this is the idea. You take the student mindset, you're
perpetually a student, it's preventing ego from taking hold.
The mixed martial arts pioneer, Frank Shamrock,
his training system is actually based on this idea.
He calls it plus minus equal.
So you want to train under someone who's
much, much better than you.
You want to challenge yourself against someone
who's as good as you.
And then you're also passing these lessons on to someone
who's not as good as you.
And it's sort of the interplay of all these different angles of the same material that
inherently humbles you.
And Emerson is saying, look, in every person that you meet, there's something that you
can learn from them.
And so focusing on this, right, not on how much you know, not on how good you are, this
keeps you humble, this keeps you learning, and it's sort of perpetually teaching you things.
The physicist John Wheeler, he says, as our knowledge of, as our island of knowledge grows,
so too does the shoreline of ignorance.
And so the point is, as you're learning more and more, what you're actually exposing yourself
to is all the things that you didn't know that you didn't even know.
And so this student mindset, you can keep it going all the time
and ego can never really take hold.
And Ben Franklin early in his career
sort of illustrates this idea.
He runs away at 18 from Philadelphia, goes to Boston,
and he comes home from Boston
and he thinks he's basically the shit, right?
He thinks he's the best.
He's actually, he's made a little money
for the first time in his life.
It is actually, it's even embarrassing
a couple hundred years later.
He would carry the coins that he'd earned in Boston around
and he would show them to people.
So he's really proud of what he's done.
And he comes back to Boston,
or sorry, he comes back to Philadelphia
and he sees his family.
And he's talking to his brother
and doing the same thing, and his brother's
just sort of shaking his head.
This is really embarrassing and mortifying.
And then Franklin goes on and he meets with Cotton Mather,
who's one of the most prominent citizens in the town,
and they're walking along this hallway,
and Franklin's sort of really high on himself.
He's really excited.
He's sort of so caught up in this performance
that he doesn't hear Mather when Mather says to him,
stoop.
And then he says stoop again, and Franklin keeps walking.
And then he runs right into a ceiling beam.
He just hits his head really hard.
And what Mather says to him, I think,
encapsulates why ego is so dangerous at this early part
in a career.
He's saying, look, if you don't hold your head up so high, if you stoop from time to
time, you'll save yourself a lot of painful bumps on the head.
And so the point is, you can start to early on, you know, when you sort of deserve it
least, is when you start to feel really full of yourself.
I went to this good school.
They chose me to work at this great company.
You know, I'm making all this money.
I'm doing this that my parents never could have done.
Doing this more than any of my friends could ever do.
And then what you do is you run smack into something
that you weren't looking out for, right?
You're so high on yourself that you bump into something.
And so in Christianity, of course, right,
we have the idea that pride goes before
the fall. And the idea is that if you're looking down on other people, you're not seeing what's
above or around you. This is a famous Carvaggio painting. This is actually David slaying Goliath.
And what you can't see, and I don't have a pointer here, but actually engraved on the
hilt of the sword is a Latin acronym for the saying, humility kills pride.
And so the idea is that if you think that you're the best, if you think that you're
invincible, if you think you've got it, someone that you're not paying attention to is going
to come and hit you with a stone and then cut your head off is the idea.
Not to get too morbid.
So the idea is that humility kills pride.
The earlier you kill it, the better that you are.
Theognos, so this is obviously a theme that goes back even before the Bible.
The first thing, kernos, which gods bestow on those they would annihilate is pride.
Cyril Connolly, again, he says, whom the gods wish to destroy, they first call promising.
So it's at this point when you think that you're the hot shit that you are actually
preventing and sort of stilting your growth at this early period, and that's what you don't want to
do.
And then of course, so let's say you do conquer ego in some way early on in your career, or
let's say you're so talented that it almost doesn't matter, right?
People put up with your shit because you're so great, you're chugging away.
Well, what happens then is ego becomes a new problem
while you have success.
It immediately endangers that which you have achieved.
So Pat Riley, the basketball coach who calls this
the disease of me, people don't really understand
that in World War II, we think there's
all these great generals.
We don't realize, sort of gets lost in history, the way that all these really sort of powerful alpha males
were constantly jockeying for power with each other.
There's sort of one general who doesn't do this, this is George Marshall.
Truman would say never did Marshall think about himself.
He's sort of the, the, the sort of trademark humble soldier.
And he, he does, does quite a bit.
He's the opposite of what you might compare
sort of MacArthur to, who I think coincidentally
is Trump's favorite general.
But MacArthur was this sort of meticulously manages
his image, you know, he's always smoking
this ridiculous corn cob pipe that he thinks
makes him look like a soldier. He's actively managing this ridiculous corn cob pipe that he thinks makes him look like a
soldier.
He's actively managing his public relations.
He loves to do these big, bold moves.
And he's constantly jockeying for power.
But Marshall really does none of this.
Famously, Marshall actually turns down the opportunity to command the troops at D-Day.
FDR says to him, look, you haven't had a chance.
This is yours if you want it.
And he says, look, don't take my feelings into account.
Sort of do what's best for the team.
And so you'd think that this,
sort of making these decisions throughout your career
to be constantly sort of turning down honors,
to be turning down rank, sort of not jockeying for power.
MacArthur actually treats Marshall pretty horribly early on in Marshall's career.
He sort of banishes him to some obscure posting.
This is the disease of me, right?
As Riley is saying, it can strike any winning team in any year at any moment.
But so, MacArthur really treats Marshall quite terribly.
And then at some point during the Second World War, the tables turn.
Now Marshall is MacArthur's boss. So what does he do? Does he take his revenge? Does
he sort of try to get even? Or does he think actually MacArthur might be a flawed person,
he might be a complete asshole, but he's what we need right now in this very specific
instance. So he sort of turns this down as well, he turns down this opportunity as well.
Famously, what I love about my favorite Marshall story is he's forced to sit for this official
portrait at one point, and he sits for several days for this painting, and the artist says,
okay, you're good to go.
And he just gets up and leaves, and the artist says, don't you want to see the painting?
And he says, like, no, I don't need to.
Basically, he just wanted to get back to work.
He had no interest in seeing a picture of himself.
And so he does all this.
And so you might think, of course,
that this sort of constant spurting
of attention of recognition is going to hurt you
over the course of your career.
But in fact, it doesn't.
Oh, this is a, sorry, I forgot this.
This is Cheryl Strayed.
You're becoming who you're going to be,
and so you might as well not be an asshole.
And I know this is one of Reed's favorite quotes.
If I'm not for myself, who will be for me?
If I'm only for myself, who am I?
But when you actually look at what Marshall
is able to accomplish, it has no effect in the long term.
This sort of constant spurning of ego
has no negative effects over the long term.
He's chief of staff of the US Army during the Second World War.
He's the Secretary of State.
He's the envoy to China during the Truman administration.
He's the president of the American Red Cross
and the Secretary of Defense.
So his tombstone, I think, says it all.
He, instead of focusing on what's gonna get him attention,
instead of focusing on accumulating power,
he's focused on doing the work, right?
He's focused on, there's John Boyd Boyd is one of my favorite military strategists.
He had this speech he would say, to be or to do.
Do you want to be an important person or do you want to do important things?
And that's what Marshall is choosing over and over again.
He's choosing to do important things at the cost of recognition, at the cost of his own
ego.
But in the end, it adds up in a much more impressive way
to all these other people.
And it doesn't matter that most people
don't recognize his name, right?
You might think that that's sort of a downside,
but of course, Marshall's not alive,
so this is not a complaint of his.
What matters is the legacy that he left behind,
the things that he did were so much more impressive
than the other people
who sort of felt like they needed to get what's theirs.
I think one of the problems is like,
we know that humility is where we wanna end up,
but we don't think it's gonna get us where we wanna go.
We think we need, like, in the beginning
or the middle of our career,
we've gotta sort of get what's ours,
we've gotta give into this disease of me,
but in fact, in the long run,
this actually diverts us from where we want to go.
And I think what you do then, instead of measuring yourself by these external measures, you use
what's called the inner scorecard.
Warren Buffett, he says it's very important to live your life by an inner scorecard, not
an outer scorecard.
And clearly, again, in someone like Buffett's case, it adds up in the end to actually an
incredible amount of accomplishments, but he's thinking long-term, he's thinking almost
like in value investing, but he's thinking about this in his own life.
So instead of measuring yourself by what other people think, you're measuring yourself by
how you think.
And part of the way that this suppresses ego, especially when you become increasingly successful,
is that you don't see yourself how other people see.
You see all the things that you could or should be doing better,
not all the things that you've done well.
So you take the New England Patriots.
This is Tom Brady's draft card from 2000.
He's taken in the sixth round, the 199th pick in the NFL draft.
He doesn't really look like Tom Brady now either.
He's probably in better shape today than he was then. But considering what Tom
Brady goes on to do, he's probably the best draft pick in the history of
football, maybe even the best draft pick in the history of sports. I mean to take
a guy that's going to win four Super Bowls, I think three Super Bowl MVPs,
he's thrown for 60,000 yards, built one of the greatest franchises in the NFL.
To do all this as a sixth-round pick, he originally joins the Patriots as their third-string quarterback.
So to do all this is incredibly impressive.
And so you'd think he might be super proud of himself, and you'd think that the organization, the Patriots,
would be very pleased with this sort of massive steal that they got away with, that they picked Tom Brady
in the sixth round.
You'd think this says how awesome they are, but in fact they actually see it as a disappointment,
right?
Because what they see is that they let Tom Brady go all the way to the sixth round.
So they remember who they picked in the fifth round, which is this guy Dave Stachelski,
who I'm sure is a very nice guy, but he doesn't even make it out of training camp.
And in fact, the director of personnel for the Patriots, he actually keeps a picture
when he was with the Patriots, he's now moved on.
But he would actually keep a picture of Stachelski on his desk as a reminder of how narrowly, you know, he went into the 2000 draft
convinced that Dave Stachelski was much better
than Tom Brady and that he was worth waiting,
he was worth getting around earlier than Tom Brady.
And the Patriots also think about this,
that if Brady hadn't proven himself in training camp,
he wouldn't have been the second string quarterback,
so he manages through hard work and effort to go one level higher.
But then if Drew Bledsoe hadn't gotten hurt, they might not have ever known what they picked.
So this is a reminder that what they're actually finding is the failure inside their success.
So they're looking at success and not saying, look how awesome we are, look how amazing
we are. They're saying, look at how narrowly we missed,
we avoided missing the greatest draft pick in sports.
Elizabeth Noel Newman, she's a great sculptor,
she's saying, I never look back
except to find out about mistakes.
I only see danger in looking back
at things that you're proud of.
This is a page from The Little Prince.
He says, vain men never hear anything but praise.
So this is the problem with ego is that ego doesn't look at a situation and say,
look at how easily this could have gone the other way,
look at what we did wrong.
It only sees the good things that it says about you.
So this is very dangerous, of course,
not because it changes the past,
but because it has the ability to change the future.
I hope it doesn't look like I'm coming to LinkedIn to trash Google.
I gave a version of this thing at Google.
But Google is a great example of some, obviously a very successful company, but an example
of how this way of thinking can be problematic and how ego can sort of lead you astray.
So Larry Page gave a talk at a conference a number of years ago and he's saying, look,
my metric is that when I'm looking at a company or project, I go, does this have the
potential to change the world? This seems very inspiring and seems awesome. Of course, Google has
changed the world, so this might seem like the metric to measure themselves against. But of
course, that's actually not how Google was successful. Google starts as a graduate thesis,
just two guys trying to finish this paper so they can
get a good grade.
That somehow becomes Google.
So they had no idea that it was going to be this
multi-billion dollar search engine.
They just thought it was a paper.
YouTube, of course, not only didn't set out to disrupt
television, it started as a dating site.
So this is the first video ever uploaded to YouTube.
For some reason, the founder thought that a video of him
with some elephants would make him attractive.
So the point is, you can very easily tell yourself
a story about your success that imbues it
with a certain amount of certainty and awesomeness
and genius and vision that wasn't actually there.
And then what this does is it affects how you look at opportunities in the future and
how you look at yourself in what you're doing.
So of course, Google Glass starts out as this ambitious, world-changing project, and they
take it so seriously, they invest in so much, that it actually creates a backlash.
And then you're looking, I compare this to say Snapchat,
which launches the same product,
but kind of as like a fun joke.
And so the difference between starting small
and starting as this ambitious world-changing thing
can actually, I think, cause problems.
Paul Graham has a great line, you know, he's saying,
the way to do really big things
is to start with deceptively small things. And I think that's the way that you look at, ego says, you know, I's saying the way to do really big things is to start with deceptively small things.
And I think that's the way that you look at it.
Ego says, you know, I'm setting out to change the world.
I'm going to be on the cover of all these magazines.
I'm going to do this.
I'm going to be a billionaire.
I'm going to do all this stuff.
But I think what a more humble approach is to start with the smallest possible thing
that you could start with, sort of follow the process.
You're sort of checking the boxes off one by one.
And you want it to go in a good direction, obviously, and it can go in a good direction,
but you're not giving yourself credit for this sort of genius and vision in advance.
And that helps you do the deceptively small things much better than if you see them as
deceptively insignificant small things. They are important because they're right there in front of you.
I'm Afua Hirsch. I'm Peter Frankopan.
And in our podcast, Legacy, we explore the lives of some of the biggest characters in
history. This season, we delve into the life of Alan Turing. Why are we talking about Alan
Turing, Peter?
Alan Turing is the father of computer science and some of those questions we're thinking about today
around artificial intelligence. Turing was so involved in setting and framing what some
of those questions were but he's also interesting for lots of other reasons, Afro.
He had such a fascinating life. He was unapologetically gay at a time when that was completely criminalised and stigmatised.
And from his imagination, he created ideas that have formed a very physical, practical foundation
for all of the technology on which our lives depend.
And on top of that, he's responsible for being part of a team that saved millions,
maybe even tens of millions of lives because of his work during the Second World War
using maths and computer science to code break. So join us on Legacy wherever you get
your podcasts.
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And then, so let's say you do launch Google Glass
and it fails, well now you're at the third phase, right?
This is failure and you're having to look at why you failed,
why you're experiencing difficulty, you're having to rebuild at why you failed, why you're experiencing difficulty,
and you're having to rebuild in some way.
Things turned out to be harder than they were.
So this is the next phase, I guess we call this the final phase.
I think one of the hard parts is, you know, we tend to,
if we tell ourselves that our success says something about us as a person,
the problem then is that when we go through something negative, we think that says something about us as a person. The problem then is that when we go through something negative, we think that says something
about us as a person.
And of course, all of these are just in different states,
as the stoics would say.
These are just different places that we occupy
along a spectrum.
So, right, transformation is a big thing here at LinkedIn.
The Greeks and the philosophers,
they would think about this a lot.
They would say that sort of all of life is fluid,
that we're constantly going through these different phases.
There's the paradox called the ship of Theseus.
And basically what it's saying is you take this great ship from this Athenian general,
and it was a warship and they preserve it as a sort of a monument to this great naval captain.
But over time, they replace it board by board.
So one board goes bad and they replace it.
They replace the mast.
They replace the icon.
They repaint it.
So over the centuries, the entire ship is replaced board by board.
And so the question then is, is this the same ship?
Or is it a totally new
or different ship? There's an argument you can make. Is the, given the staggered terms,
let's say in the U.S. Senate, is it actually the same Senate today that it was when America
was founded 200 years ago, right? Is a process that's being replaced member by member, but there is no official point where everything is changed.
Where does the changeover happen?
So it's not that you're a success
because you're successful and a failure because you're a
failure, but you're in this constant state of process.
Marcus really is just saying, meditate often on the
swiftness with which all exists and coming
into existence and that everything is constantly shifting and never stands still.
Heraclitus, Marcus Aurelius' famous philosopher would say, no man steps in the same river
twice because he's not the same man and it is not the same river.
So this is the idea that it's this fluid place.
And so success doesn't say you're awesome,
failure doesn't say you're awesome,
it just is what it is.
We're just constantly fluidly transforming
from one thing into another
and we won't be in that thing for very long,
we won't be in the next thing for very long.
This is a famous Roman, he's saying,
holding great honors and powers did not exalt my spirits,
nor did evil depress them.
So at one point he's given a triumph
in front of the Roman people,
and then he's exiled by the Roman people,
and then brought again back to Rome,
and he triumphs again.
So this idea is that none of this says anything about us,
it's just a place that we happen to be.
And then you wanna think this way
because things are going to change,
and things are going to go quote-unquote badly a lot.
This is a picture of Thomas Edison's factory in the early 1900s.
He sat down for dinner with his family. A man rushes in and actually he tells him, hey look, the factory is up in flames.
He rushes to the scene and he finds his life work literally on fire.
Two interesting facts. So one, Edison was famous for his experiments with cement.
And he built these buildings out of cement.
And because he thought the cement was fireproof,
he didn't have insurance.
So he's literally watching everything he's worked for
sort of disappear.
And then because he kept all these weird chemicals
in the building, it's actually a really strange, surreal fire.
It's all these different colors.
So he comes to the scene and he finds his son.
His son is standing there.
His son is shell shocked.
Sort of, what are we gonna do?
You know, this is horrible.
And Edison says famously, he says,
go get your mother and all her friends.
They'll never see a fire like this again.
So he hasn't gone insane, although it might seem that way.
He's not happy really that his work is going up in flames. So he hasn't gone insane, although it might seem that way.
He's not happy really that his work is going up in flames,
but he is enjoying this sort of strange moment, right?
And what he says to a reporter the next day is like,
look, I've been through stuff like this before.
It prevents a man from being afflicted with ennui.
Basically, it invigorates him.
He takes a million dollar loan from Henry
Ford, and within about six weeks, the factory's partially back up and running. By the end
of the year, it's sort of fully operational again. And he does quite well that year as
well. And it sort of is the final act of Thomas Edison. It's this thing that sort of gets
him out of his complacency and sort of puts him back on a path that he said he was a builder.
He loved building things, and so it actually gives him something to dedicate himself to.
But the idea with the Stoics, they call this amor fati, sort of a love of everything that
happens, even the bad things, because they prevent their own opportunities in their own
way.
And then, you know, it's not just accepting the things that happen. It's not just accepting the failures,
but loving what they might teach us,
what they might sort of put us towards.
And if you can do that, if you can see that
as this sort of constant transformation,
you're actually quite invincible
because it means nothing really bad can ever happen to you.
You're always gonna be able to move forward.
You're always gonna be able to say,
hey, at least this doesn't make life boring,
or at least this gives me something to throw myself into.
Then I think the last part about failure,
this is the important lesson that I have to think about as a writer,
as a creative person as well,
is that you're going to put a lot of effort and work into a project,
and at a certain point, it leaves your hands.
It goes out into the world,
and you no longer control how other people are
going to react to that, right?
So one of my favorite novels, I think it's probably the funniest novel of all time, is
this book, A Confederacy of Dunces, by John Kennedy Toole.
It's so funny that Jim Belushi and Will Ferrell and I believe Ben Stiller have all tried to
make it into a movie but couldn't.
And anyway, so John Kennedy Tool, he writes this book.
He submits it to Scheinman & Schuster, who is his publisher.
And they said, this book is no good.
We're not going to publish this.
His agent doesn't believe in it.
So he's profoundly rejected.
And he's so depressed by this rejection,
to go to the quote we were just talking about earlier,
he's so upset by this rejection that he
ends up committing suicide.
He commits suicide on a lonely road in Biloxi, Mississippi. He attaches a car hose or a hose to the exhaust
pipe of his car and he dies. And his mother is distraught. A few years later, she finds
this manuscript in a drawer in his desk and she reads it and she knows this was his life's
work. And she submits it to an editor at Louisiana,
or I think this is Loyola Marymount in New Orleans.
This is Walker Percy, who himself is a great writer.
Percy immediately recognizes it as the work of genius
that it is.
He has it published.
And the book wins the Pulitzer Prize for fiction that year.
So this is my point that there really is no good or bad.
It's just sort of this external situation.
So the same book that was rejected by these publishers
who they said it was terrible,
he dies, so he doesn't edit it.
He does nothing to it.
That same book is then heralded as the greatest novel ever,
and it wins the Pulitzer Prize.
So the idea is you have to be, in some ways,
indifferent to these external judgments.
This is where the inner scorecard comes in, because there's all these things that you
don't control.
And if you take other people's judgments as the barometer of success for you, for this
thing you threw yourself into, you've now taken your happiness or your sense of self
and given it to these people.
And let's be honest, a lot of these people are really dumb and really short-sighted.
If you think about all the great authors and artists
and inventors and thinkers who were rejected,
but really were just way ahead of their time,
sort of gives you a sense of why you can't let these
sort of external measurements decide
if something is good or not.
Marcus Aurelius is saying, I love this,
he's like, look, we love ourselves more than other people,
but we care about other people's opinions about us
more than our own.
And so if you can flip that, if you can go,
I have my own sort of measurements,
I have my own criteria for success or, you know,
quality or, you know, anything,
then you're going to be much freer.
You're going to be much more in control of your own destiny.
Goethe is saying what matters to the active man
is that they do the right thing,
whether the right thing comes to pass should not bother him.
Essentially, let's not focus on whether this ends up
having the exact effect that we wanted,
but by our own criteria, was it successful?
I think about, I'll give you an example with my own books. So I put out these two books. that we wanted, but by our own criteria, was it successful?
I think about, I'll give you an example with my own books.
So I put out these two books.
They sell objectively enough copies to land on the New York Times bestseller list.
But then, mysteriously, the week arrives and they're not there.
And it turns out that it's actually a problem with how they were submitted.
There's something in publishing called a bisack. So basically, they don't show up because somebody
checked the wrong box on a form, and the books don't show up.
So am I going to tell myself that the book is a failure
because it doesn't hit this arbitrary,
this external scorecard?
Or am I going to be happy that I did the right thing,
I did the right book, I made the right decisions? How am I going to be happy that I did the right thing, I did the right book, I made the right
decisions?
How am I going to do that?
Am I going to see the thing that I worked on for two years as a failure because someone
else said it didn't meet a random set of criteria?
Of course not.
That would be insane.
And so you see this though.
A lot of people, they go, this wasn't number one, so it's a failure.
You're letting other people determine whether you're happy with something that otherwise,
before it came out, you thought was great.
You thought it was the best that you could do.
So you wanna measure it by this internal scorecard
and not the external one.
And then this is Robert Louis Stevenson.
It's a sore thing to have labored along
and scaled arduous hilltops, and then when all is done,
find humanity indifferent to your achievement.
But this is gonna happen all the time, right?
You gotta get used to this.
This is part of life.
What matters is that you're not indifferent
to what you've accomplished.
What matters is that you know that what you did
was the best that you could have done at that moment.
This is a much better measurement of success or failure.
John Wooden, you know, success is peace of mind,
which is a direct result of self-satisfaction
and knowing that you made the effort to do your best
and to become the best that you were capable of becoming.
So he would say, look, obviously he won a lot
as a basketball coach, maybe more than almost
any other coach, but he would say,
it wasn't the box score at the end of a game
that determined whether it was a good game or not.
It was, did they execute the plan
that they'd set out to execute?
Did they play the game the way they'd practice
to play the game?
This is something entirely in your control
and everything else is outside of it.
So look, those are the three areas, right?
Success, aspiration, and failure.
I thought I would give one more sort of last thing
that I think is, I think the ultimate way to combat ego at all
These phases is sort of a constant reminder
Which is sort of focusing on the immensity of the world around you
Not it's very easy to feel like you're the center of the universe if all you're doing is thinking about yourself
This is Glacier Bay in Alaska
John Muir visits in the late 1800s and
He writes this very long paragraph. It visits in the late 1800s, and he writes this very long paragraph.
It's in the book, so I won't try to read it.
But he's in the middle of Glacier Bay,
and basically what he experiences in this moment
is what the philosophers call
the infinitesimal point of the immensity.
He's feeling the oceanic feeling of connection
to all the things that are happening around him, right?
How the waves are interacting with the seaweed and the plankton and the whales and the animals
on the hills and the sun.
All of these things are in this sort of, this vast ecosystem of which him as a human being
in a boat is a tiny part of, right?
And he feels in this moment all the obsessions and
worldly cares sort of fall away. The reason he helps us create our national
parks is to encourage this feeling, to encourage people to go out into nature
and feel small and big at the same time, right? So this is Sedona I took a picture
of. It's very, it was very hard to feel self-important looking out over this
view, right? This is my donkey in Austin.
Austin is called the city of the violent crown.
That's the violent crown.
But you know, sir, standing there looking at this donkey,
he does not, he's not concerned with what's going on.
He has no criteria for what a good day is or a bad day.
He has no obligations to speak of, right?
Other than existing, his job is or a bad day. He has no obligations to speak of, right, other than existing.
His job is to be a donkey.
And as long as he does that, it's a good day, right?
But humans, we sort of subject ourselves
to all this pressure.
And of course, ego comes into play then.
Here's Buddy with a picture of the book.
Also humbling, right, to have your pet eat something
that you spent many years working on.
This is a line from Seneca. I won't embarrass myself with translation, but basically, the world itself is a huge temple of all the gods.
The world is a church, if you think about it this way, and it can humble us and make us aware of the things that are bigger than us.
There's a park in Texas called Dinosaur National Monument,
I believe.
You can stand in this footprint in a creek bed
that a dinosaur made 110 million years ago.
So it's very hard to feel self-important there
if you're experiencing the vastness of history,
which we can barely comprehend.
There was a cool thing on Reddit a few years ago.
So I think the vastness of history is interesting, but then also shortness of history.
So they did the math and they said there's some photographic evidence of this in historical
documentation.
But how many individuals who shook hands with each other does it take to connect Obama and
George Washington?
You'd think it'd be like 20, 25 people.
It's six.
Six human lives overlapped long enough.
And if Queen Elizabeth meets Trump at some point,
it'll add another generation.
But the idea is that history is much shorter
than we think it is, and that all these things
that we think are so important are really just,
you know, a tiny second that don't really matter.
This is a crazy video you can watch.
I know I don't have much time left,
but it's a show called I've Got a Secret.
It was a game show in the 50s.
Here's this old man, he's on the show.
The guest that day is Lucille Ball,
and they're guessing his secret,
and he starts, he's like, you know, it was scary.
She asked if it was historically important,
and he says yes.
She goes on and on, and it turns out
the man's secret is that he saw John Wilkes Booth shoot Abraham Lincoln
as a five-year-old, so it's crazy to think,
we think that the Civil War was so long ago,
but in fact there was a guy who saw Lincoln get assassinated
and then was on a game show with the host,
or with the star of I Love Lucy,
and you can now watch this on YouTube,
which as we know started as a dating site.
So the absurdity of all this is a little humbling, right?
It's hard to feel self-important
when you're thinking about these things.
But it's also not about making you feel insignificant
but also realizing the connectedness
of all these things around us.
Neil deGrasse Tyson, right?
When you look up at the universe, you feel small but you also feel big because you're a part of this thing. Not a big part, not
the center of it by any means, but you are a part of it. And so when I'm talking about
ego and I'll close with this, I'm not trying to tear anyone down, I'm not trying to make
you feel horrible or nothing. What I'm trying to do is show that if you can suppress ego,
if you can knock this out of the equation,
what it actually opens you up to do, it liberates you to accomplish the big things that you're trying to accomplish.
Without adding, it's like if it's already hard enough to change the world or start a big company
or to write a book or a symphony or whatever you're trying to do,
what you don't want is your ego there tagging along trying to make it harder than it already was going to be.
So that's the idea.
It's not to knock anyone down a peg,
but it's to liberate them from ego, which is our enemy,
which prevents us from doing the thing
that we're trying to do.
And so that's it for me.
This is Ego is the Enemy,
and I'm happy to answer any questions. Thanks for listening to the Daily Stoke podcast. Just a reminder, we've got signed copies of
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