The Daily Stoic - It’s A Practice | Taylor Swift Used Stoicism To Beat The Music Industry
Episode Date: April 30, 2024📺 Watch the full clip: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yeg94Z1yW6I✉️ Sign up for the Daily Stoic email: https://dailystoic.com/dailyemail🏛 Check out the Daily Stoic Store&...nbsp;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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Have you ever felt like escaping to your own desert island?
Well, that's exactly what Jane, Phil and their three kids did
when they traded their English home for a tropical island they bought online.
But paradise has its secrets, and family life is about to take a terrifying turn.
You don't fire at people in that area without some kind of consequence.
And he says, yes ma'am, he's dead.
There's pure cold-blooded terror running through me.
From Wondery, I'm Alice Levine, and this is The Price of Paradise,
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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
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using maths and computer science to code-break.
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Welcome to the daily stoic podcast where each day we read a passage of ancient wisdom designed to help you in your everyday life.
On Tuesdays, we take a closer look at these stoic ideas, how we can apply them in our
actual lives.
Thanks for listening and I hope you enjoy.
It's a practice. It may feel that you're not good at this stoicism thing.
You lost your temper yesterday.
You relapsed on some bad habits.
You did something that was unkind.
You did something out of fear.
Okay, few would confuse you with Cato.
So few confused anyone with Cato.
Even in Rome at that time,
there was an expression, we can't all be Catos.
This isn't to excuse your mistakes
or your less than virtuous behaviors.
It's just to point out that you're thinking about it wrong.
The great record producer Rick Rubin makes a helpful analogy in his book,
The Creative Act, which I talked to him about
in a great, great episode of the Daily Stoic podcast,
which you should definitely check out.
Just like you might say that you're not a good stoic,
people might say, or worse,
believe that they're not creative.
You're either engaging in the practice or you're not,
Rubin says. It makes no sense to say that you're not creative. You're either engaging in the practice or you're not, Rubin says.
It makes no sense to say that you're not good at it.
It's like saying, I'm not good at being a monk.
You're either living as a monk or you're not.
What he means is that creativity like philosophy
is not an end state.
It's a process, it's a practice.
It's the attempt, not the outcome that counts. It's an intention,
not a disposition. So what if you fell short? Were you trying? Are you still trying? That's
the important thing. Stoicism is something we do, or rather it's something that we're doing.
Every single day we're trying. Every single day we are putting the time and the effort and the
intention in. We won't always be successful.
We won't always live up to our standards.
But what counts is that we don't quit.
What matters is that we trust the process,
that we respect the practice.
When Taylor Swift's masters are sold in 2019, she's not happy about this, right? They're sold to Scooter Braun, who actually reads the Daily Stoic every day, so it's cool
with me, but she doesn't like it, right?
That's what matters is that she doesn't like it.
She decides that's not something that works for her.
So after she reminds herself to calm down and then reads this tweet from Kelly Clarkson,
one of the most epic tweets of all time, I think we'd have to say, she decides she's
going to do precisely this, right?
So she re-records her first five albums and has basically been putting out music almost
every day since that point, right?
So Taylor Swift was of course very successful, very popular, very well known before this,
but it becomes this sort of springboard, the act of constantly releasing music, being the cultural center of the universe now,
for basically three or four consecutive years,
it not just transforms her and her crew,
but it elevates her to a level of pop stardom
that I don't think anyone has ever reached before,
maybe other than the Beatles.
And you look at the heiress tour,
the heiress tour is possible, right? Precisely
because she's just reintroduced a whole generation to her music. And I think what's interesting
too is like, it's not just that she becomes bigger and more popular as a result of this
process and seizes control of something that she didn't have control of financially before,
but the songs get better too, right?
It's this remarkable example of taking something that you never would have chosen, that you
thought was profoundly unfair or screwed up, right?
The worst part of the music business.
And it becomes this catapult, right?
And 1989 is the most streamed album of all time.
She's Time's person of the year now. What we do after the thing has happened to us
is what matters. And it's not that everything is this, that everything becomes the catapult that
advances our career to stratospheric levels. That's not always how it works. Life is much more
brutal and frustrating and unfair than that.
But we always have the opportunity to decide the end of that story,
what it's going to mean to us, how we integrate it into our lives,
who we become because of it.
And this is Marcus Aurelius' story also, right?
So Marcus deals with the plague, he deals with floods, he deals with war,
he deals with a coup. It's one thing after another.
And an ancient historian who's writing
not far from Marcus' time would say that
Marcus does not get the good fortune that he deserved.
It had been 20 years of uninterrupted peace and prosperity,
and then all hell breaks loose,
like the second he takes over.
And here you have this guy, this philosopher king,
who wanted, he had this agenda,
he had these things he wanted to do.
He didn't get to do those things
because all hell was breaking loose.
But that's not the end of the story, of course, right?
We don't look at him and lament what could have been, right?
We look at him and we see how incredible it was,
as that same historian would say,
that I, for my part, admired him all the more
for this very reason, because
amidst unusual and extraordinary circumstances, he both survived himself and preserved the
empire.
Marcus Aurelius is great because of what he went through, because of what he did while
he went through it, because of who he was.
Absolute power is supposed to corrupt absolutely.
It not only does it, it makes him better. Right, so obstacles aren't always tragedies and disasters,
it's just the stress, the responsibility,
it's the new situation you're thrust into.
This is the opportunity for excellence,
that's what the obstacle is the way it means.
And it's funny, as I was finishing up the book,
I was reading about this tree,
this conifer tree that I'd never heard of before,
but what I thought was so interesting about it, so it's like any other pine tree, it drops its pine cone and then the pine cone
is what generates the next generation of trees.
Except for this pine cone, it only unlocks, it can only germinate if it is exposed to
temperatures that the climate does not naturally reach.
It's only in a fire that this pine cone looks like the one
that I'm holding in my hand.
That's one of them.
This woman, she puts them in the oven
and cranks the oven way up, and then you get to see it happen.
I have this sitting on my desk.
It's, to me, an illustration of this idea
that the obstacle becomes the way,
unless we are exposed to difficulty and stresses
and adversity in situations that we did not want, right?
We can't fully become what we're capable of becoming.
We can't fully unlock.
And the Stokes have this idea of a more fati.
It's not just acceptance, right?
Part of what Taylor Swift has to do is accept
that her masters are not in her hands.
But once she accepts it,
once she accepts that they've been sold,
then she can get to work turning it in to something new
or better or different, right?
And so the Stoic idea for this is a more fati,
a love of fate.
You don't just resist it or deny it or blame,
but you accept it and then you turn it into something
that you feel like was chosen for you,
that you were designed for,
that this is the moment where it all happens for you.
Mark Struela says, you know,
what you throw on top of a fire becomes fuel for that fire,
right, that it turns it into flame and brightness and heat.
And of course, this is the essence of what artists do,
whether they're musicians or writers
or comedians or painters, we take what we've experienced,
what life has subjected us to,
and we turn that into material, we turn that into ideas.
The worst pain that the artists that perform
at your shows have gone through,
become what thousands, millions of people cheer for,
wanna see, bond to each other with, relate to.
So we take what happens to us and we turn it into material.
And this is how we grow.
This is how we build brands and businesses.
This is how we bring people together. Hey, Prime members, you can listen to the daily stoic early and ad free on Amazon Music.
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