The Daily Stoic - It’s How It Makes You Heal | Pain Is Self-Inflicted Harm
Episode Date: September 23, 2024It wasn’t fun that it went sideways. It hurt that they hurt you. It took something that you can never get back. That’s life. That’s resiliency. That’s how the obstacle is the way.📕... Get a signed, numbered first-edition of the 10th anniversary edition of The Obstacle Is the Way by Ryan Holiday at dailystoic.com/obstacle📓 Pick up a signed edition of The Daily Stoic Journal: 366 Days of Writing and Reflection on The Art of Living: https://store.dailystoic.com/🎟 Ryan Holiday is going on tour! Grab tickets for London, Rotterdam, Dublin, Vancouver, and Toronto at ryanholiday.net/tour✉️ 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.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Wondery Plus subscribers can listen to the daily Stoic early and ad free right now.
Just join Wondery Plus in the Wondery app or on Apple podcasts.
We've got a bit of a commute now with the kids and their new school.
And so one of the things we've been doing as a family is listening to audiobooks in the car.
Instead of having that be dead time, we want to use it to have a live time.
We really want to help their imagination soar.
And listening to Audible helps you do precisely that.
Whether you listen to short stories,
self-development, fantasy, expert advice,
really any genre that you love,
maybe you're into stoicism.
And there's some books there that I might recommend
by this one guy named Ryan.
Audible has the best selection of audio books
without exception and exclusive Audible originals
all in one easy app.
And as an Audible member, you choose one title a month
to keep from their entire catalog.
By the way, you can grab Right Thing right Now on Audible. You can sign up right now for a free
30-day Audible trial and try your first audiobook for free. You'll get Right Thing Right Now totally
for free. Visit audible.ca to sign up. Welcome to the Daily Stoic Podcast. Each day we bring
you a meditation inspired by the ancient stoics 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 happen
to be doing.
So let's get into it.
It's how it makes you heal.
It wasn't fun that it went sideways. It hurt that they hurt you. It took something that
you can never get back. Would Marcus Aurelius have preferred his reign to go swimmingly? Of course.
Did he want to be betrayed in a coup? Did these things and countless other tragedies nearly break
him? In fact, it did break him, as it would nearly any person. Hemingway wrote about how
when these things happen to us, we can become stronger in the broken places.
Taylor Swift sings in a song thanking someone
who bullied her, that I can't forget
the way you made me heal.
If we can choose to learn from what happened,
if we can choose to grow from what happened,
if we can choose not to be made bitter and awful,
choose not to be like our enemies, as Marcus wrote,
then maybe someday we can be grateful for this experience.
Someday we can understand that we wouldn't have any of this
without all of that.
We can understand that they gave us something
when they took from us,
that they healed us when they hurt us.
That's life, that's resiliency,
and that's how the obstacle is the way.
And I've been telling you, I've been working on this 10 year anniversary edition That's resiliency and that's how the obstacle is the way.
And I've been telling you, I've been working
on this 10 year anniversary edition of the obstacles way.
Well, it's got stories in it like that.
I love that story about Hemingway when I heard it.
And I still, even after I finished my books,
I keep researching for them.
And I've been hanging on to that story
and been so excited to put it in the book.
And it's there alongside
that famous Rubin Hurricane Carter story.
There's also a story about Julia Baird,
who gets this terrible cancer diagnosis
and she goes through a heartbreak
and what she finds within herself.
It's also Stockdale, who I've been writing about recently.
It's what he draws on.
The idea is it's not what happens to you.
It's about who you become after, how you grow from it.
And if you want one of these signed numbered first editions
of The Obstacle's Way, I've been joking,
it's my Ryan's version of it as a nod,
like Taylor Swift's version.
Obviously both versions of the book are mine,
but this is my newest, I think, best version of it.
You can pre-order your copy.
It's coming out on October 1st.
You can grab it only from the Daily Stoic store.
That's dailystoic.com slash obstacle.
And if you want a signed page from the manuscript
like we did with some previous books,
we've got those also.
I think we've got to buy two copies or three copies.
I don't know, go to dailysteelhook.com slash obstacle
to check it out.
Panic is self-inflicted harm.
This is from today's entry in the Daily Steelhook Journal
where we riff on, we have a weekly meditation
and then daily journaling.
But let's think about it, right?
Name one situation that is improved by panicking.
Go ahead, like seriously, can you think of something where panicking makes it better?
Seneca mused often about the problem of panic, both in his letters and his essays.
The problem with panic is that it creates danger and it limits our ability to function
effectively, prevents us from finding success and seeing objectively.
And worse, it makes us weaker over time
because we've never truly faced the danger
that we're worried about.
We're always running away and then we're weaker as a result.
So spend some time today meditating on scary things
that might make you panic.
Think about them in advance.
Think about what's so overwhelming about them.
Come to understand them, get familiar with them.
One of the chapters I have in Courageous Calling
is I talk about this dictum
that Napoleon had for his generals.
He said, ask yourself three times a day,
what would I do if the enemy appeared on my left
or my right or the center?
Obviously the idea here wasn't to create anxiety.
It was precisely to prevent panic.
By thinking about what scares us in advance, by familiarizing ourselves with it, Napoleon
was saying, we can respond to it.
We can have a plan.
A general who has a plan, who has an understanding, who has contingencies, who has backup plans
and backup plans for the backup plans, and they understand that no plan survives contact
with the enemy, that's the general who can endure things. That's the general who's less afraid.
Fear makes us worse.
Familiarity makes us less afraid.
And that's what I talk about in Courage is Calling.
But we have three quick quotes from Seneca today.
For even peace itself will supply more reason for worry.
Not even safe circumstances will bring you confidence
once your mind has been shocked,
once it gets in the habit of blind panic.
It can't provide for its own safety, for it doesn't really avoid danger, it just runs
away.
Yet we are exposed to greater danger with our backs turned."
There's another great quote I have in the book from Chris Hadfield, a Canadian astronaut.
He says, remember, it's always possible to make a problem worse.
Panic does that. Worry does that. Fear does that.
Makes us worse. Seneca says we're actually more in danger as we're running away than when we face
our problems. Then he says success comes to the lowly and to the poorly talented but the special
characteristic of a great person to triumph over the disasters and panics of human life.
And then he says the unprepared are panic stricken by the smallest
things. Another quote I have from Seneca and Courage is calling that I really love. He says,
the only inexcusable thing for an officer to say is, I did not think that could happen.
So you can't panic just because it's a surprise, just because it came out of nowhere, just because
it's a black swan. In fact, your whole job is to be prepared for exactly this. Your whole job is how do you perform under pressure?
How do you perform when the enemy is up close?
How do you perform when other people are running away,
when other people are scared?
This is why courage is so important.
We have to see panic and fear
as something that makes us worse.
It's a competitive disadvantage.
It's not that we never have fear.
It's that we have the fear, we are alert to what it's trying to tell us, then we try to get to work
breaking it down. We try to get to work preparing for it. We try to get to work anticipating
it. We try to get to work putting ourselves in a position where if it does happen, and
it probably will happen, we'll be able to respond. We'll know what we can do. As Napoleon was saying,
what would you do if they were on your left?
What would you do in your front?
What would you do if they were over here?
What would you do if all of these things
happened at the same time?
That's what confidence and courage gives you.
I hope you spend some time journaling
about panic and fear this week.
I hope it makes you better, stronger and braver.
If you wanna come see me talk,
you wanna see me get over some of my own stage fright
and you wanna ask questions and hang out a bit,
I would love to see you.
I'm doing events in London, Rotterdam and Dublin
in early November and then after that Vancouver and Toronto.
This is all basically the 12th through the 20th.
So it's gonna be a busy November for me.
So grab tickets, ryanholiday.net slash tour.
Both the events in Australia sold out. So these will sell for me. So grab tickets, ryanholiday.net slash tour. Both the events in Australia sold out,
so these will sell out also, so grab your tickets.
I'll see you all soon.
If you like The Daily Stoic, and thanks for listening, you can listen early and ad free
right now by joining Wondery Plus in the Wondery app or on Apple podcasts.
Prime members can listen ad free on Amazon Music.
And before you go, would you tell us about yourself by filling out a short survey on
Wondery.com slash survey.
Being a part of a royal family might seem enticing, but more often than not, it comes
at the expense of everything, like your freedom, your privacy, and sometimes even your head.
Even the Royals is a podcast from Wondery that pulls back the curtain on royal families
past and present from all over the world to show you the darker side of what it means
to be royalty, like the true stories behind the six wives of Henry VIII,
whose lives were so much more than just
divorced, beheaded, died, divorced, beheaded, survived.
Or Esther of Burundi, a princess who fled her home country
to become France's first black supermodel.
There's also Queen Christina of Sweden,
an icon who traded in dresses for pants,
had an affair with her lady-in-waiting,
and eventually gave up her crown
because she refused to get married.
Throw in her involvement in a murder
and an attempt to become Queen of Poland,
and you have one of the most unforgettable legacies
in royal history.
Follow Even The Royals on the Wondery app,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
You can binge Even The Royals ad-free right now
on Wondery Plus.