The Daily Stoic - How To Create Change | Made For Working Together
Episode Date: July 21, 2023Rosa Parks wasn’t just some lady who happened to make a stand on a bus one day. She was trained. She had attended NAACP meetings for years. She had gone to the Highlander Folk School, which... cultivated a generation of activists. In his fascinating book Waging a Good War, Tom Ricks (who has a must-listen-to interview on the Daily Stoic podcast) explains, “Each Highlander training session of one or two weeks began with a strategic question: ‘What do you want to do?’ It ended with a tactical discussion of how to reach that outcome: ‘What are you going to do?’”---And in today's riff on The Daily Stoic entry, Ryan examines what Marcus has to say about providing socially useful life by embracing the need to work with people who may sometimes be difficult.✉️ 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.📱 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. 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. So today, it will give you a quick meditation
from the Stokes with some analysis from me,
and then we'll send you out into the world
to turn these words into works.
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Rosa Parks wasn't just some lady who happened to make a stand on a bus one day.
She was trained.
She had attended NAACP meetings for years.
She had gone to the Highlander Folk School, which cultivated a generation of activists.
In his fascinating book Waging a Good War, Tom Ricks, who has a must-listened to episode
on the Daily Stoke Podcast, he explains that each highlander training session of one or
two weeks began with a strategic question.
What do you want to do, they asked?
And then it ended with a tactical discussion of how to reach that outcome.
What are you going to do?
Rosa Parks took pages of notes during her training.
Friends would remark how much gutsier and confident
she was after she left.
And when that fateful day came,
when the bus driver said,
all of you make it light on yourselves
and let me have those seats, she was ready.
She knew what she wanted, which was quality and respect.
And when the police officers came,
she knew what she was going to do.
She would go to jail over it.
The woman met the moment exactly as Epictetus said, we must be able to meet it with the reply.
This is what I trained for. One mistake that we make when we're looking back at these
activists is focusing only on the moral legitimacy of their grievances, excepting almost as a
given that they would triumph because they deserved to triumph.
As we discussed on a more recent episode of the Daily Stoke podcast with Professor Jennifer Baker,
in fact, it was the incredible discipline and training of the civil rights activists that allowed them to win.
Most people simply did not agree at the time that blacks were equal,
that the laws that tyrannized them were unjust, that they were capable of changing their place in society.
It was only through moments of great bravery and poise and restraint, like parks stand
on the bus or the defiance of the freedom writers, that they were able to make this case public
time and time again.
Despite beatings and firehoses, illegitimate arrests and barbaric bombings, they never deviated
from their training. Their
courage and temperance, as it happens, was what made the most compelling argument for justice.
Rosa Parks wasn't born with the courage and discipline to stand up for herself on that bus in
December 1955. She prepared herself to respond to the unfairness with calmness and clarity.
to the unfairness with calmness and clarity. So if you find yourself facing unfairness, bad news,
or just plain bad luck, you must remember.
You trained for this.
Hi, I'm David Brown, the host of Wondering's podcast,
Business Wars.
And in our new season, two of the world's leading hotel brands,
Hilton and Marriott, stare down family drama and financial disasters.
Listen to business wars on Amazon music
or wherever you get your podcasts.
This is today's entry July 21st in the Daily Stoke. And the quote comes to us from Marcus Aurelius' Meditations 812.
Whenever you have trouble getting up in the morning,
remind yourself that you've been made by nature
for the purpose of working with others,
whereas even unthinking animals share sleeping,
and it's our own natural purpose that is more fitting and satisfying.
If a dog spends all day in bed,
you're bed most likely that's fine.
It's just being a dog.
It doesn't have anywhere to be,
no other obligations other than being itself.
But according to the Stoics,
we have a higher obligation as humans,
not to the gods, but to each other.
What gets us out of bed each morning,
even if we fight it like Marcus sometimes did,
is to render works held in common.
Civilization and country are great projects we build together and have been building together
with our ancestors for millennia. We are made for cooperation with each other.
So, if you need an extra boost to get out of bed this morning, if you need something more than
caffeine can offer, use this. People are
depending on you. Your purpose is to help us render this great work together and we're
waiting and we're excited for you to show up. Let's look at the haze translation of that
real quick. haze says as part of eight, 12. haze says, so when you have trouble getting
out of bed in the morning, remember that you're defining characteristic.
What defines a human being is to work with others.
Even animals know how to sleep,
and it's the characteristic activity
that's the more natural one, more innate and more satisfying.
And then let's look at the great Robin Waterfield translation
in his annotated edition, which I highly recommend and enjoy quite a bit.
You pull up 8-12. He says, whenever you find it difficult to wake up,
remind yourself that doing socially useful work is proper to your constitution and your humanity,
while sleeping is something you share with irrational animals as well.
And anything that's proper to an individual's nature has a greater affinity to him and his second nature to him, and moreover is more refreshing.
I love that.
So when the Stoics talk about politics, they don't think they always mean running for office,
and when they talk about the common good, I don't think they necessarily always mean charity.
They mean socially useful work.
Are you contributing to society? Are you making the world a better place? There's a sign over on this
track that I like to run on that was put up by Hollywood Henderson. I think I've said this story
before, but he put up a science, just leave this place better than you found it. I think that's a great
rule for life. It's interesting, though, to me.
In Marcus talks a lot about struggling to get out of bed in the morning. It's clearly a common theme.
And then he also talks a lot about working with difficult people. So maybe the difficult people
are, oh, I gotta go do this again, you know, he was an introvert. He preferred philosophy,
preferred ideas to people necessarily. But he knew that it was
inescapable, that as a human being, as a philosopher, as a leader, as a politician, his job was to work
with these difficult people to find a way to contribute, to find a way to make them better,
to find a way to put them to productive or socially useful ends. And that's what we have to remember today.
Obviously you're up or you wouldn't be listening to this,
but how are you gonna provide socially useful work today?
How are you going to make do with difficult people?
How are you gonna put up with them, as Mark really says?
We talked about this a couple weeks ago
that even the famous obstacle is the way passage.
Is about that, is about dealing with the people who obstruct us and annoy us and frustrate us
and finding a way to make a positive contribution to the world in spite of
with, through, because of them, for them, that's what we're here for.
That's the work that we're here for. That's the work that we're here for.
That's our purpose.
Animals can sleep around.
You know, maybe some people aren't going to seize
that potential, but that's their call.
We're not going to reject the opportunity.
We're gonna take advantage of it.
We're gonna make a positive contribution,
a socially useful contribution, big or small.
You don't have to be Winston Churchill or Gandhi
to make the world a little better,
to leave this place a little better than you found it.
Be nice to someone, write something,
help someone, teach your kids something.
Pick up trash that you see by the side of the road, vote,
contribute to a cause, donate time,
whatever it is, do some socially useful work today
make a positive contribution,
and realize that this is what you got out of bed for.
This is what you were put here for.
This is the work of a human being, the Stokes would say.
So go to it, seize it, love it, appreciate it.
Fucking crush it, man.
That's my message for today. I wish you all the best.
Talk soon.
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