The Daily Stoic - Just Don’t Make Things Worse
Episode Date: September 27, 2019At the beginning of The Odyssey, Zeus utters a famous lament that must, one imagines, be shared by all gods and parents and presidents alike:This is absurdThat mortals blame the gods! They sa...ywe cause suffering but they themselvesIncrease it by folly.At the heart of Stoicism is an admission that life is unfair and largely out of our control. Bad stuff happens to everyone, the vast majority of it not even remotely our fault. Nobody asks to die. Nobody asks to be lied to or smacked by a natural disaster or leveled by some freak accident. The Gods, or luck, or Fate—that’s who is responsible for these untimely deeds (to us at least). But the Stoics also agree with Zeus’s complaint: That humans take this misfortune and compound it. We make things worse than they need to be. By complaining. By quitting. By getting upset about them. By placing blame. By trying desperately to undo what must happen, or to outsmart it by scheme or by bargain. We add folly on top of misfortune.That’s really the plot of The Odyssey if you think about it. Odysseus is too clever for his own good, and it gets him into trouble constantly. He was almost home, but then he took a nap and his curious men—who he refused to explain himself to—opened a bag of wind that set them back. He was free of the Cyclops—who was awful, yes—but then he had to taunt him, not content to leave well enough alone. It was the costliest of all the errors he made. The whole story is Odysseus making a bad situation worse, over and over again until he is rescued by Athena.The key to life may not be brilliance or power. What if it’s just not being stupid? What if it’s just not increasing our troubles by adding folly and hubris and greed on top of them? There’s no guarantee, but it’s worth a try… See 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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Just don't make things worse.
At the beginning of the Odyssey, Zeus utters a famous lament
that must one imagine be shared by all gods and parents and presidents alike.
This is absurd, he says, that mortals blame the gods. They say we cause suffering, but they themselves
increase it by folly. At the heart of stoicism is an admission that life is unfair and largely out of
our control. Bad stuff happens to everyone,
the vast majority of it, not even remotely or fault.
Nobody asked to die, nobody asked to be lied to
or smacked by a natural disaster or leveled
by some freak accident.
The gods or luck or fate, that is who is responsible
for these untimely deeds, to us at least.
But the Stoics agree with Zeus' complaint
that humans take this misfortune and compound it.
We make things worse than they need to be
by complaining, by quitting,
by getting upset about them, by placing blame,
by trying desperately to undo what must happen
or to outsmart it by scheme or by bargain.
We add folly on top of misfortune.
That's really the plot of the Odyssey, if you think about it.
Odysseus is too clever for his own good,
and it gets him into trouble constantly.
He was almost home, but then he took a nap in his curious men,
who he refused to explain himself to,
opened a bag of wind that set them back.
He was free of the cyclops, who was awful, yes, but then he had to taunt him, not content
to leave him well enough alone.
It was the costliest of all the errors he made.
The whole story is Odysseus making a bad situation worse over and over again until he is rescued
by Athena.
The key to life may not be brilliance or power.
What if it's just not being stupid?
What if it's just not increasing our troubles
by adding folly, incubus, and greed on top of them?
There's no guarantee, but it's worth a try.
If you like the podcast that we do here
and you wanna get it via email every morning,
you can sign up at dailystoic.com slash email.
Hey, prime members, you can listen to the daily stoic early and add free on Amazon music, download the Amazon music app today, or you can listen early and add free with
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