The Daily Stoic - It’s A Very Special Thing | We Can Work Any Way
Episode Date: August 2, 2024What we see in Meditations is not the finished product of a philosopher but the process of philosophy—we are watching Marcus philosophize to himself. It’s like we get to eavesdrop on one ...of the world’s greatest singers giving the most earnest performance of their lifetime, totally to themselves.🎙️ Listen to The Responsibility of Translating Marcus Aurelius | David Hernández de la Fuente | Apple Podcasts, Spotify, & Wondery📚 Translations of Meditations:The Daily Stoic The Inner Citadel Meditations translated by Gregory Hayes 📕 Pick up a copy of Lives of the Stoics by Ryan Holiday | https://store.dailystoic.com/💡How to Read Marcus Aurelius’ Meditations (A Daily Stoic Guide) is designed to help you get the most wisdom and very best tools Stoicism has to offer and apply them to your life. Get How to Read Marcus Aurelius’ Meditations (A Daily Stoic Guide) & all other Daily Stoic courses for FREE when you join Daily Stoic Life | dailystoic.com/life✉️ Want Stoic wisdom delivered to your inbox daily? Sign up for the FREE Daily Stoic email at https://dailystoic.com/dailyemail🏛 Get Stoic inspired books, medallions, and prints to remember these lessons at the Daily Stoic Store: https://store.dailystoic.com/📱 Follow us: Instagram, Twitter, YouTube, TikTok, and 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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I've been writing books for a long time now and one of the things I've noticed is how every year,
every book that I do, I'm just here in New York putting right thing right now out.
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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, we'll give you a quick meditation
from the Stoics with some analysis from me,
and then we'll send you out into the world
to turn these words into works.
["The Art of Living"]
It's a very special thing. How many books have been published since the time of Zeno?
Hundreds of thousands, millions?
We know that Chrysippus, a later scholar of the Stoic School, himself wrote something
like 700 little books and essays.
How many books of philosophy, how many memoirs, how many books of
self-help, how many books on leadership have there been through the centuries? Literally too many to
even estimate. And yet Meditations stands more or less alone from them all. Nearly every other book
was written to be published. Even the diaries and journals, which Meditations is sometimes described as.
Even these books of other famous or powerful people
are far more about what those people were doing
or were written with some kind of affect
hoping to be seen by later generations.
David Hernandez de la Fuente,
a Spanish classicist and translator of Meditations
who had a great recent episode on the Daily Stoke podcast,
he explains that Meditations was not conceived for us to read, but rather as the vehicle
that this cultured man who had a contemplative attitude found to question himself.
In other words, it was a book for the author and not for the reader.
What we see in Meditations is not the finished product of a philosopher, but the process
of philosophy.
We are watching Marcus Aurelius philosophize to himself
about right and wrong, about his temper,
about his fears, about death, about power,
about the meaning of life in a dark and a painful world.
In Pierre Hedot's fascinating book on meditations
called The Inner Citadel, he describes this
as a series of spiritual exercises.
Philosophy then wasn't a thing that Marcus Aurelius read or wrote about, it was a thing
that he did that just happened to manifest itself into a book that survived after his
death.
This makes meditations a remarkable and peerless work.
It makes it authentic and raw.
It somehow manages to make an otherwise utterly inaccessible life. That of a Roman Emperor makes it accessible to
generation after generation even thousands of years later. He'd probably
be mortified to know that we are reading it, would have written and edited it very
differently if he knew people would ever see it. It's like we get to eavesdrop on
one of the world's greatest singers giving the most earnest performance of their lifetime totally to themselves. To not avail yourself of this work, to not dip
in and out of its accidental wisdom is crazy. History and circumstances have blessed us beyond
comprehension. Let's not let it go to waste. And by the way, if you're thinking about reading meditations,
you're not sure what translation to get.
I mean, first off, we have an awesome one.
We have the one that I use every day
in the Daily Stoic store, I'll link to that.
But we did this cool course for Daily Stoic
where we really broke, it's sort of a book club
of meditations.
If you're thinking about reading it,
you don't know where to start.
I think this is the place to start.
And you can grab that in today's show notes,
I'll link to that or you can find it in the Daily Stoic store. And you can grab that in today's show notes. I'll link to that.
You can find it in the Daily Stoic Store.
And then just as a reminder,
if you wanna get the Daily Stoic Meditations course,
and in fact, all our courses and challenges for free,
you can sign up right now for Daily Stoic Life,
which includes that and a bunch of other awesome stuff.
So you can do that all in one swoop, dailysteeliclife.com. Hey, it's Ryan Holiday.
It is August 2nd.
I can't believe it's already August 2nd and I am holding in my hands the Daily Steelic
366 Meditations on Perseverance, Wisdom, and the Art of Living.
You can grab a premium leather edition.
You can grab signed editions at stored.dailysteilich.com.
And the entry for today, we can work anyway.
Indeed, how could exile be an obstacle
to a person's own cultivation or attaining virtue
when no one has ever been cut off from learning
or practicing what is needed by exile.
Mussonius Rufus lectures.
Mussonius Rufus is Epictetus' philosophy teacher
and he was exiled at least three times.
We'll get into that.
But the entry for today begins as such.
It says, late in his life after a surgery,
Theodore Roosevelt was told he might be confined
to a wheelchair for the remainder of his days.
With his trademark cheeriness, he responded,
all right, I can work that way too.
And this is how we can respond
to even the most disabling turns of fate
by working with whatever room is left.
Nothing can prevent us from learning.
In fact, different situations are often opportunities
for their own kind of learning.
Even if they're not the kinds of learning
we might have preferred.
Musonius Rufus, for his part, was exiled three times.
There's a theory that it was actually four times,
twice by Nero, once by Vespasian.
But being forcibly expelled from his life and home
didn't impinge on his study of philosophy.
In a way, he responded by saying,
all right, I can work that way too.
And he did, managing to squeeze in some time
between exiles with a student named Epictetus, and thus helping bring Stoicism into the world. In fact, that's not the only way.
I'm going to grab this because there's a chapter on Musonius Rufus in Lives of the Stoics,
and there's this great story about one of his exiles that I loved. Okay, so I say,
it was there that Musonius sat some 700 miles away from home, wondering if he needed to follow his own advice
and courageously wait for death.
Why didn't he kill himself, as he had suggested to Thrasia?
That's another Stoic who'd stared down near O.
He had reminded Thrasia that there is no reason
to choose a heavier misfortune
if we can make do with the one in front of us.
We can train ourselves to be satisfied
with the difficulties fortune has chosen to give us.
Besides, Musonius believed he still had living to do.
One who by living is of use to many, he said,
has not the right to choose to die
unless by dying he may be of use to more."
That was, of course, how Seneca and Thrasio
ultimately went out.
Their example, their defiance, their heroism was of use.
They didn't just commit suicide out of despair.
So Mussonius lived and
he studied as we must, as long as it was in his control to keep doing so well and for the greater
good. The island where he was exiled was a dry, harsh place that today is unpopulated, but Mussonius
seized every opportunity that he could to live by his teachings and to be of use to the people
around him. According to one source,
he discovered an underground spring on the island,
earning him the eternal gratitude
of some of his fellow residents,
most of whom were also political exiles.
It is clear that he believed that exile was not evil
or a hardship, but merely a kind of test,
chance to move closer to virtue if one so chose.
So he did, rededicating himself to teaching and writing,
playing advisor to the philosophers and dignitaries who visited him from across the Mediterranean.
Another exchange captures Musonius' fighting spirit there on the island. We're told that
Demetrius the Cynic, who had been with Thrasia during his last moments, encountered Musonius,
bound in chains and digging a pickaxe on a chain gang for one of Nero's canals.
"'Does it pain you, Demetrius? Musonius was said to reply,
if I dig the isthmus for the sake of Greece,
what would you have felt
if you saw me playing the lyre like Nero?
The dates on this encounter make it hard to trust
as the canal was being constructed
during the time of his confinement,
but these stories nevertheless give us an insight
into the reputation of Musonius' character.
Whether he was providing for thirsty islanders
or digging a canal for the benefit of Greece,
the hardship of exile was not enough to break the will of a true philosopher.
But what of all the comforts he was deprived of?
Musonius chose to think about what he still had access to, the sun, the water, the air.
When he missed the amenities of Rome, friends, or the freedom of travel, he reminded himself
and his fellow exiles that when we are home, we did not the whole earth nor did we have contact with all men. And then he got back to
spending his time in exile doing what he did best, finding opportunities to do good. Because for the
stoic the chance is always there even in the worst of circumstances as bad as exile or any adversity
is can make you better if you choose. And so look, this is the idea of this entry
in the Daily Stoic that doesn't matter what happens,
you can find a way to work with it,
you find something to do with it.
And I think it's important,
look, the Stoic saying this thing is one thing,
but it's that they lived it, it's that they acted with it,
it's that they did it in real exile,
not a hypothetical exile that gives us so much to point to and to be inspired by
and to try to live up to.
You can check out Lives of the Stoics.
Of course, you can grab Daily Stoke,
but Lives of the Stoics, I'm really proud of
because it's not what the Stoics said, it's what they did.
Grab a signed copy at store.dailystoic.com
or come grab one at the painted porch, the Stoa Pokele,
which is a bookstore named after
where Zeno founds Stoicism
himself having a similar experience working with washing up in Athens penniless and ending
up in a bookstore.
Thanks so much for listening to the Daily Stoke podcast.
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