The Daily Stoic - It Works If You Work It | Impulse Control
Episode Date: April 17, 2023It's felt like things have been a little off lately. You have been irritable. You have been stressed. You have been easily rattled by external events, you have been focusing on things outside... your control. You have been a little caught up in projects at work, in getting ahead, in getting what you want. You haven't been the role model you aspire to be at home.What's the source of all this? Well, why don't we look at our habits?---And in today's Daily Stoic Journal excerpt reading, Ryan discusses the importance of remembering that our first impulses are usually out of proportion with actual value.📗 Preorder your copy of The Daily Dad: 366 Meditations on Parenting, Love and Raising Great Kids (including numbered, signed first editions) now. 📔 And if you want a better edition of Marcus Aurelius’ Meditations for your bedside table (to actually use, of course), check out our new version of the Gregory Hays translation.✉️ 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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Hey, prime members, you can listen to the Daily Stoke Podcast early and add free on Amazon
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Welcome to the Daily Stoke Podcast.
Each day we bring you a meditation inspired by the ancient Stokes 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, something to leave you with, to journal about whatever it is you're It works if you work it.
It's felt like things have been a little off lately.
You've been irritable.
You've been stressed.
You've been easily rattled by external events.
You've been focusing on things outside your control.
You've been a little caught up in projects at work and getting ahead and getting what you
want. You haven't been the role model you aspire to be at home.
What's the source of all this? Well, why don't we look at our habits? We haven't been
journaling. That copy of meditations has been gathering dust on the bedside table, who
knows when it was last cracked. Forget reading philosophy, you've been glued to your phone,
mainlining, outrage porn, and partisanship and breaking news. Of course, we still agree with all the
stoic ideas in theory, but in practice, well, in practice, we have been drifting and
neglecting what is supposed to be a practice. So, of course, we're falling short. In
sobriety circles, they have a great saying, it works if you work it. Meaning that the steps and the exercises are not magic,
but they are tried and true.
If you follow them, they'll bear fruit.
And this is how it goes with stoicism, too.
It is revelatory at first, but beyond that,
its real power exists only in whether you're applying it day to day,
recommitting to the ideas day to day. That's what Marcus was
doing in meditations, by the way, admonishing himself and reminding himself of what he had first
been told as a child, but was still trying to work well into old age. Seneca 2 was lingering on
the master thinker, Xeno, and Clientes, and Cricipuspus trying to get something new from them each day.
If you want to do better, if you want to feel better, well, the solution is simple.
Start doing the work.
On the parenting front, by the way, trying to be a better role model at home, the new book,
The Daily Dad 366 Meditations on Parenting Love and Raising Great Kids is available for
pre-order now, including some numbered sign first editions. And if you want a better edition of Marcus Aurelis is Meditations for your
bedside table, which I cracked myself yesterday. My new leather edition, well, you can check
out our edition, our version of the Gregory Hayes translation, which I designed to, you know, stand the test of time,
be able to put some miles on it, you can grab that at store.dailystoic.com. I'll link to both
these things in today's show notes, but I'll leave you there. Check, do preorder the new book.
It would mean a lot to me. If you know someone who's going to become a parent or is a parent,
maybe you can even give it to your own parents. My father-in-law was telling me today that he reads it and it helped him be a better grandparent to my kids. The daily dad
3656 meditations on parenting love and raising great kids, you can grab a dailydadbook.com.
It's funny, I talk to lots of people and a good chunk of those people
haven't been readers for a long time. They've just
gotten back into it. And I always love hearing that. And they tell me how they fall in love
with reading. They're reading more than ever. And I go, let me guess, you listen audio
books, don't you? And it's true. And almost invariably, they listen to them on Audible.
That's because Audible offers an incredible selection of audio books across every genre
from bestsellers and new releases to celebrity memoirs. And of course, ancient Philosophy, all my books are available on audio, read by me for the most part.
Audible lets you enjoy all your audio entertainment in one app. You'll always find the best of what
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new voices in audio. You can check out Stillness is the Key, exclusive new series, exciting new voices in audio.
You can check out Stillness is the key, the daily dad.
I just recorded so that's up on Audible now.
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Visit audible.com slash daily stoke or text daily stoke to 500-500.
That's audible.com slash daily stoke or text daily stoke to 500 500.
If something is making you upset, write it down and look at it.
What happened?
Who caused it?
Now think about your reaction.
What did you say?
What did you feel?
Did this make it better or worse?
Marcus Aurelius' emperor clearly had many people and causes to be upset. He also had real power and authority.
Even so, we find that he would tell himself you have power over your mind, not outside events.
Realize this and you will find strength.
not outside events. Realize this and you will find strength.
So too, with what has happened to you,
you did not control what happened,
but you do control which impulses you will follow
in the wake of it.
And this is this week's meditation
in the Daily Stoke Journal titled,
Impulse Control.
I do hope you check out the journal.
It's a little journal I do every morning.
We have three quotes here that go along with it.
Epic Titus says, we must discover the missing art of Ascent and pay special attention to the
sphere of our impulses that they are subject to reservations, to the common good, and that they
are in proportion to actual worth. It's Marcus Realis' Meditations 1137. I just love that
you have Marcus Realis quoting epictetus.
You say good fortune used to meet you at every corner,
but the fortunate person is the one who gives themselves
a good fortune, and good fortunes are a well-tuned soul,
good impulses, and good actions.
That's Marcus Realius' Meditations 536.
Frame your thoughts like this, you're an old person.
You won't let yourself be enslaved by
this any longer. No longer pulled like a puppet by every impulse and you'll stop complaining about
your present fortune or dreading the future. To me, journaling is just such a great way to do this
exercise of impulse control.
I usually do it in the morning,
but you could do journaling at any time,
but I think, what are you upset about?
Why are you angry?
What are you holding on to?
What's that thing inside you that you really want
to say to that person?
Say it on the page first.
And Frank talks about how paper is more patient than people.
Sometimes I find that the thing that I was writing down,
I hadn't quite worked it out yet, and if I had said it the way I was thinking on the paper,
it would not go well. Or I find that having said it once, I'm done. I don't need to mention
this to anyone. It's probably better that I keep it to myself. So to me, journaling is really a way to work out some of those urges.
Just because you think something doesn't mean you need to say it, I'm always amazed
that these athletes who, you know, after a loss rushing the locker room and tweet something,
as if, dude, you're not going to be in a small metal tube with the person you just talked
shit about for the next eight hours as if you don't
have the show up to work with them every single day. You need to develop this emotional impulse control
but that doesn't mean you just stuff it down and you don't deal with it. You got to deal with it
on the pages in the journal. That's the idea. You let it out. It's a place to do some spiritual
combat but it's also a place for your ideas.
You're competing impulses. You're competing opinions to battle themselves out, to fight
for that limited space. So spend some time with your generalized therapy. That's what it's
there for. And if you're not taking advantage of it, chances are you are just taking those
feelings out on other people or you're taking
them out on yourself and that's not a good way to go through life. So, use the
journal as an instrument of impulse control. It's gotten me out of trouble time
and time again. I can think of a moment when one of my books was coming out and I
got sort of royally screwed over by a journalist. I wouldn't even say
screwed over anymore.
Let's just say someone did something to me
that was quite unethical and quite petty and annoying.
And actually the prompts in the Daily Stoke Journal,
it caught me day after, it was like three prompts in a row.
I didn't rush into saying something,
I was gonna wait a few days.
And at the end of the three days,
at the end of the journaling, kept it to myself.
And even now, I don't need to tell you the specifics.
I've moved on.
And it saved me some headache, probably saved me creating an enemy for no reason.
And then I can move on.
And I hope 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 add free with Wondery Plus in Apple podcasts.
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