The Daily Stoic - How To Better Understand The Past | Say No to the Need to Impress
Episode Date: March 27, 2023In retrospect, so many of the decisions the Stoics made are baffling. Marcus Aurelius and his son Commodus. Seneca and Nero. Their attitude toward women, toward slavery, toward violence, towa...rd what society was supposed to look like. Even more recently, what of Stockdale and the complicated nature of the war in Vietnam.Didn’t they know? Didn’t they know better?Sometimes…but not always.---And in today's Daily Stoic Journal reading, Ryan discusses the importance of avoiding the need for external validation, especially in the age of social media.✉️ 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 Discipline is Destiny.📱 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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Welcome to the Daily Stoic Podcast.
Each day we bring you a meditation inspired by the ancient Stoics illustrated with stories
from history, current events, and literature to help you be better at what you do.
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How to better understand the past. In retrospect, so many of the decisions
that the Stoics made are baffling,
Marcus Aurelius and his son, Comedis,
Senica and Nero, their attitude towards women,
towards slavery, towards violence,
towards what society was supposed to look like,
even more recently, what have stocked down on the complicated nature of the war in Vietnam?
Didn't they know? Didn't they know better?
Sometimes, but not always. To understand the Stokes, we have to understand something.
They weren't living in history. They were living in what they viewed as the present,
what they thought was actually a progressive time. They did not know where things were going. They had only a partial
view of the picture. Just as today, we have only a partial picture of our own moment.
The late David McCullough, who's Truman biography, I've raved about a bunch of times and I carry
at the painting porch, he once said that the hardest part about being a biographer is getting
the reader to keep in mind that nothing was ever on track.
As he continues, things could have gone any way at any point.
As soon as you say, was, it seems to fix an event in the past, but nobody ever lived in
the past, only in the present, he said, the difference is that it was their present.
They were just as alive and full of ambition and fear and hope in all the emotions of life.
And just like us, they didn't know how it would all turn out.
The challenge, he said, is to get the reader beyond thinking
that things had to be the way they turned out
and see the range of possibilities
of how things could have been otherwise.
And this is not to say that no one should ever be judged
for their mistakes or for the failures of the past.
Of course, they can and should be, but we have to understand the context in which these things happened and why they happened,
because it helps us do better here in the present.
The ancient world was not a thing that existed. It was just the world, just as it is in our time.
Then and now, the world was filled with flawed and emotional people,
and these flaws and these emotions were responsible for things that did not age well.
Just as hours will be if we do not properly manage them,
if we do not strive to do better, strive to see as much of the picture as we can.
It's also a reminder, as always, that we must be humble.
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Say no to the need to impress. If the desire to impress and be liked by others is in
eight to humans as a species, then every generation born before social media got lucky.
Today, we face an unending stream of status updates
demanding to be filled with all the impressive things
we are doing, the trials we are overcoming,
announcements of our dangers averted
and triumphs realized it's exhausting.
Centuries ago, Epic Titus saw this pride and narcissism
even in his own computerless students
and reminded them that it wasn't so innocent.
In fact, he told them that it would destroy their life's purpose.
It would distract and fatigue them.
Santa Cato saw the seeking of approval of spectators as one of life's disgraces.
Watch those impulses today.
Notice how much you seem to need your phone and status updates and ask,
is this the person I wanna be?
Is this what a philosopher would do?
And this is from this week's entry
in the Daily Stoke Journal,
which you can check out.
I do the journal every morning.
I sit down and spend some time with the blank pages.
We've got two epictetus quotes
and one sent a quote to round it out.
If you should ever turn your will to things
outside your control in order to impress someone,
be sure that you have wrecked your whole purpose in life.
Be content then to be a philosopher in all that you do.
And if you wish also to be seen as one,
show yourself first that you are and you will succeed.
That's epictetus is in Corridion 23. In public
avoid talking often and excessively about your own accomplishments and dangers.
For however much you enjoy recounting your dangers, it is not pleasant for others to
hear about your affairs. Epictetus is in Corridion 3314. How disgraceful is the
lawyer who's dying breath passes well at court at an
advanced age pleading for unknown litigants and still seeking the approval of ignorant spectators?
Santa Capp on the brevity of life. 20. You know, I think about this. I have a little
rule for me. When I'm working on a book, I don't talk about it. I don't tell people that I've
finished. I don't tell people that I just finished chapter people that I've finished, I don't tell people that I just finished chapter two,
I don't tell people that I just signed a deal.
In fact, on my last book deal, I didn't even announce it.
I could have gotten a little press,
and early in my life I kind of wanted that validation,
hey I did it, maybe the media,
maybe it's good for my brand.
Now I see all that stuff as distraction.
Even social media, if you follow me,
I'm at Ryan Holiday on Twitter and Facebook
and I guess Instagram and at Daily still, also.
But you'll notice there's almost no real time
updates for me.
I never really got the habit, but when I feel it
peeking up, I break it immediately.
These are not platforms for me to fish for validation.
I don't wanna say, hey, look what I'm doing.
And then people go, oh, you're so great.
Oh, you're so awesome.
I'm not saying we do that because I'm, like, well, no.
And I'm saying, like, your friends do this.
We wanna congratulate each other.
We wanna encourage each other.
And I get that.
But that's not why I wanna be a writer.
That's not why I wanna do things.
As I say in the boy who would begin,
all the things Marcus Aurelius did made him very popular. It's not why he did it. He did it because they're the right thing.
So I try not to let social media, I try not to let the chase for validation or approval.
I try not, it's not a need, I really ever try to say it. I don't feed it because I feel like the more you feed it, the more it
wants from you. So I try to focus on just not talk, I try to let my work do the talking about my work.
That's not to say I don't believe in marketing. I do. Brand is important. I mean, I have the social
media. I just try to have a healthy relationship with it, a healthy balance with it. So I'm using it. It is not using me.
And look Twitter and Facebook and Clubhouse
and all these apps, you're the product that's being sold.
They're exploiting your need for validation and attention.
Right?
They know that you want to tell people what you're doing
and then you want to hear what people say
about what you're doing and then you want to respond
to the people who aren't liking it enough
and then you want to check back and see how many comments it got or likes it got
or whatever.
There's a reason Instagram, I think Instagram did people a public service when they turned
off, you know, some of the not everyone can see how many likes or, you know, views they're
post-court.
I think that's great.
As a public figure, they leave these tools and they are tempting.
And so I don't even have it on my phone.
I don't want to touch it.
Every time I never go to one of these sites
and I feel better about myself as a person,
I just feel that that insatiable need
has been encouraged a little bit.
So let's say no to trying to impress other people.
Let's not care what other people think.
As Marcus really said,
it's another quote we could have included in the entry.
He says, you know, we care about ourselves more than other people yet for some reason.
We care about their opinions way too much.
No, focus on what you have to do.
Focus on you.
Focus on what you think, what you know is right.
Do things for that reason.
If you get validation for it afterwards, wonderful, but that can't be why you do it.
And if it is why you do it, it's going to break your heart.
I promise you.
So say no to the desire to impress other people.
Plus other people, man, they don't know.
They're wrong.
99% of the time anyway.
Focus on what you know.
Just do the right thing.
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