The Daily Stoic - It’s Easier To Be Angry Than Hurt | Why Not Try Something New?
Episode Date: June 14, 2024💡 Take the first step towards a calmer future by signing up for the course: Taming Your Temper: The 11 Day Stoic Guide to Controlling Your Anger at the Daily Stoic Store: https://dailystoi...c.com/anger📚 Grab a copy of Asylum by William Seabrook at The Painted Porch: https://www.thepaintedporch.com/✉️ 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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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. It's easier to be angry than hurt. It was Seneca who said that anger outlasts hurt,
meaning that we take something that happened to us and we make it worse by taking it personally,
by lashing out, by returning wrong to wrong. Certainly no one illustrated this more
than his pupil Nero or Claudius,
the emperor who exiled Seneca
for some preposterously small slight.
But it's not just that anger is worse,
it's that anger is easy.
It's easier to be angry than hurt.
Being angry is active, it's aggressive, it's distracting.
Hurt is acceptance, it's something you sit with.
It's something you wish you didn't feel but you do
It's something you wish that hadn't happened but did
When Marcus really said that it wasn't manly to get angry
Perhaps this is what he was saying
That the childish thing is to yell about it and fight about it and reject the hurt that you feel
The adult thing is to try to understand it to come to terms with it
To understand that like all with it, to understand that
like all things it will pass and that if you're patient and have perspective, this will help.
The responsible thing is to explore the roots of an emotion, to ask why you are feeling
a particular way, why something was so triggering or painful, and try to deal with that.
Unfortunately, the popular perception of Stoicism is about the suppression of of emotion that one should simply not feel anything just stuff it down
No, when something happens, we must understand that we have a choice
Are we going to get angry which is easy even if it ultimately makes things worse?
We're gonna feel hurt and then from that hurt heal and grow and learn
Which way will you take the easy way or the
hard way? And as usual, the stoics have some of the
smartest and most applicable exercises when it comes to anger.
That's why we created Tame in Your Temper, the 10-day Stoic
Guide to Controlling Anger. 10 days of challenges, exercises,
video lessons, and bonus tools based on stoic philosophy.
Materials to help you deal with your anger in a constructive manner. We will
give you the tools that you need not just to manage your anger but to leave
it in the past so you can focus on what's important. Living a virtuous and
fulfilling life. You can learn the wisdom of the great thinkers and leaders of
history through this course. Marcus Aurelius, Seneca, Abraham Lincoln, even Mr. Rogers, and many others.
You'll be able to use our unique exercises to break free from the cage that anger has
built around you and see the world and yourself in a new light.
Each day you'll be able to watch a new video from me as I explain the ideas behind the
words and shed light on the path that you're on, but that I am also on because again, we are all struggling to tame our
temper and we will all be better if we can get closer to that. Being able to
control your anger is a difficult but worthwhile goal. It will take time and
effort, won't be free, but by changing your perspective and developing
techniques to control your temper, it will ultimately be
achievable and life changing. So take the first step on the path
to a calmer and more fulfilling future. Check out Taming Your
Temper, the 10 Day Stoic Guide to Controlling Your Anger. You
can click the link below or you can just go to
DailyStoic.com
slash anger.
You can just go to dailystoic.com slash anger.
Try the other handle. This is the June 14th entry in the Daily Stoic,
366 Meditations on Wisdom, Perseverance,
and the Art of Living.
Remember, we've got the cool Leather Bound edition
in the Daily Stoic store.
I'll share that.
I'm holding, this isn't quite a first edition
because it says best seller on it,
but this is pretty early on.
I wonder how long I've had this one.
I wonder if it says here which edition it is.
Now it doesn't say what printing,
but anyways, I wanna get into today's entry
because I really like it.
This is from Epic Cheetahs in Caridion.
Every event has two handles,
one by which it can be carried and one by which it can't.
If your brother does you wrong, don't grab it by his wrongdoing, because this is the handle
incapable of lifting it. Instead, use the other, that he is your brother, that you were raised
together, and then you will have hold of the handle it carries. The famous journalist William Seabrook suffered from
such debilitating alcoholism that in 1933 he committed himself to an insane asylum,
which was then the only place to get treatment for addiction. In his memoir Asylum, by the way,
this is an incredible little memoir he has. I first heard about it from Fitzgerald's The Crack Up,
which was about his own struggle with alcoholism.
And this was a book that was basically totally lost to print.
And then it recently got brought back out.
Like I had to buy an old expensive copy on Amazon, and then it started to become popular
again.
I can take some partial credit from having talked about it in the reading list over the
years.
So there's a new edition of it.
We carry it in the painted porch.
You should read it. It's a fascinating memoir because Seabrook was this
great travel writer, like one of the great travel writers of his time, who sort of wrecked his
career from alcoholism. Because there was no such thing as alcoholics anonymous. There were no
treatments. That's why he had to check himself into this insane asylum. But it's a beautiful,
haunting, very sad memoir, but beautifully done.
Anyways, in asylum, he tells the story of the struggle
to turn his life around inside the facility.
At first, he stuck to his addict way of thinking,
and as a result, he was an outsider,
constantly getting into trouble
and rebelling against the staff.
He made almost no progress
and was on the verge of being asked to leave.
Then one day, this very quote from Epictetus about everything having two handles occurred
to him.
I took hold now by the other handle, he later related and carried on.
He actually began to have a good time there.
He focused on his recovery with real enthusiasm.
I suddenly found it wonderful, strange and beautiful to be sober, he said.
It was as if a veil or a scum or a film had been stripped from all things visual
and auditory. It's an experience shared by many addicts when they finally stop doing things their
way and finally open themselves up to perspectives and wisdoms and lessons of those who have gone
before them. There's no promise that trying things this way will work, that grabbing the
different handle. There's no promise that it will have these momentous results,
but why continue lift by the handle that hasn't worked?
One of my other favorite quotes from Mark Cerullo
is he talks about being like the animal fighter
at the games torn up and bloodied and near death,
it's begging to go out and fight again.
He was saying, this is like us,
we're just trying to do things the same way
as we've always done them.
And then that ties into that expression
about how insanity is trying things the same way
over and over again, expecting different results.
We constantly pick things up by the old handle
of taking them personally,
of focusing what's not in our control,
skepticism, cynicism, whatever it is, right?
We all have these tendencies
to look at things a certain way.
Maybe that's why you're always fighting
with your spouse about a certain issue
or your own parents about a certain issue
or maybe whenever you get stressed,
this is the behavior that you engage in.
That's what I think Seabrook was doing.
The idea is, well, what if you tried it
by a different handle?
And I think, as I've talked about before,
there's more than one handle.
There's unlimited amount of handles,
stories, options, approaches, you can take to things.
So why do the one that you've always done,
why do the one, especially if it doesn't work,
why not try something new?
Look for the generous interpretation.
Look for the one that gets you out of your comfort zone.
Look for the one that challenges you. Look for the one that gets you out of your comfort zone. Look for the one that challenges you.
Look for the one that makes you open-minded, open-hearted.
Look for the one that makes you try something
that you're not inclined to do.
Look for the one that makes you better.
Look for the one that makes other people better.
That's the idea.
And I wish I could say that William Seabrook's story
ended wonderfully as you
read an asylum and his later memoirs, you know, it doesn't.
He wasn't sort of a wrong place, wrong time.
If he'd held that just a little bit longer, you know, he would have gotten some of the
benefits of 12 Step and other understandings that we subsequently have of addiction.
But I think that he wrote the book is wonderful and it can help people and it's why I've
raped about it for so long.
And anyways, that's today's entry in the Daily Stoic.
Thanks for listening slash reading.
I'll talk to you all soon.
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