The Daily Stoic - Let These Make You Better | Bastrop Library Q&A
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Alice and Matt here from British Scandal. Matt, if we had a bingo card, what would be on there?
Oh, compelling storytelling, egotistical white men and dubious humour.
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Follow British Scandal wherever you listen to your podcasts.
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're exploring the life of Cleopatra.
An iconic life full of romances, sieges and tragedy.
But who was the real Cleopatra?
It feels like her story has been told by others
with their own agenda for centuries.
But her legacy is enduring and so we're going to dive
into how her story has evolved all the way up to today.
I am so excited to talk about Cleopatra Peeta.
Love Cleopatra.
She is an icon.
She's the most famous woman in antiquity.
It's gotta be up there with the most famous woman
of all time.
But I think there's a huge gap
between how familiar people are with the idea of her
compared to what they actually know
about her life and character.
So for Pyramids, Cleopatra and Cleopatra's Nose.
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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.
Well, on Thursdays, we not only read the daily meditation,
but we answer some questions from listeners
and fellow Stoics who are trying to apply this philosophy
just as you are.
Some of these come from my talks,
some of these come from Zoom sessions
that we do with daily Stoic life members
or as part of the challenges.
Some of them are from interactions I have on the street
when there happened to be someone there recording. Thank you for listening and we hope this is
of use to you.
Let these make you better. One of the oldest Roman traditions was the celebrations of the
greats. Generations of Romans wrote and told stories
of the great men and women of history,
celebrating the things they did,
the sacrifices they made, the virtues they embodied.
Marcus Rilius' philosophy teacher, Sextus,
was the grandson or the nephew of Plutarch,
perhaps the most widely read biographer of all time.
His works on the Stoics of the Imminent Greeks and Romans
were popular not just in ancient Rome,
but in Shakespeare's day,
popular with the founding fathers.
They're popular even today.
We sell them in the bookstore.
And Marcus himself, it looks like,
kept his own version of this kind of book
called The Deeds of the Ancient Greeks and Romans,
alongside his more famous meditations
where he noted what he admired about his predecessors.
"'Nothing is as encouraging,' he would write in meditations,
"'as when virtues are visibly embodied
"'in the people around us,
"'when we're practically showered with them.
"'It's good to keep this in mind,' he said."
But what virtues did Marcus most often note down?
What inspired him?
It wasn't the conquests of Alexander,
it wasn't the brilliance of Plato, it wasn't the speeches of Demosthenes. What Marcus took pains to
note down over and over and over again were the things like the generosity of
his mother, the way she seemed to even be unable to conceive of doing the wrong
thing. He wrote of Antoninus' dedication to his duty and his altruism. Of a
different Alexander, in this
case a literary critic, he noticed how he was patient with people who made mistakes
and how he always took the time to answer questions. From Sextus, Plutarch's relative,
he recognized how he got along with everyone and was full of love. We could say unequivocally
that Marcus Aurelius was a collector of stories regarding other people's goodness. He took the time to write these things down so he would remember them and
be inspired by them, so he could model his life after them. These stories made him better,
reminded him of what his most important job was to be a good person and to work for the
common good. He was choosing his Cato, as Seneca advised, finding the models to measure himself against.
And my new book, Right Thing Right Now, is basically a collection of these kinds of stories.
And you can pre-order.
I would love if you did, by the way, just dailystoke.com slash justice.
I talk about the model of Harry S. Truman, who was loyal to his friends, his colleagues,
his fellow citizens, and taxpayers, even when it cost him politically.
There's the model of Gandhi, whose commitment to a cause freed millions from oppression
and violence.
There's the model of Cato himself, who made a career out of purity, out of his refusal
to give an inch in the face of pressure to compromise and deal, whose example was vaunted
not only by all the other Stokes, but the founding fathers as well.
These stories are there to inspire us and challenge us to say, why are you working so hard to be more successful, but not as hard to be more generous, more patient, more honest, or more loving?
They're there to help you build your own little book, like Marcus did, of examples to draw on when you're tempted, when you feel stressed, or you face a terrible dilemma.
Will we do the right thing?
Will we do the selfless and amazing thing?
Or will we do the easy thing? Will we do the selfless and amazing thing? Or will we do the easy thing?
The self-interested thing?
The heroic thing?
Or the dishonorable thing?
These lives, these stories, these books,
which were not easy to track down,
but always wonderful to write,
they can make the crucial difference
in how we respond to life's obstacles and challenges.
And look, because I would love for you to pre-order the book.
It really helps authors to help get a book off the ground.
I've got a bunch of awesome bonuses for you.
You can get signed and numbered pages from the manuscript.
You can have dinner with me, do a bunch of awesome stuff.
I would love for you to do that.
You can head over to dailiesdoke.com slash justice
to grab that today.
Really appreciate it and we'll talk to you soon.
Hey, it's Ryan, welcome to another Thursday episode of the Daily Soap podcast. I told you back in March, I did a little
event at the Bastrop Public Library. Bastrop is the town
where the painted porch is.
It's the county where my ranch is.
It's where I'm recording this right now.
And so when the public library asked me
if I might come do a little Q&A for a fundraiser
they were doing to raise money for the library,
I said, of course.
It was a nice little chat.
My kids were really excited to go
and then my son just couldn't keep it together. And it was an interesting little chat. My kids were really excited to go and my son just couldn't keep it
together. And it was it was an interesting little insight like he
wanted to do something but then he didn't have what we would call the
self-command to be able to sit through it and so he ended up going and playing
outside of it. He didn't get in trouble or something but it was clear he wanted to do
something but then he couldn't do something. And what I took from the
experience was I learned a lot from that watching this sort of out of the corner
of my eyes I'm trying to answer the questions and was watching my son sort
of be in this little battle with two parts of himself it's affected how my
wife and I have sort of parented and talked about since but that's of course
not what I was talking about in the Q&A people wanted to ask about books of
course they wanted to talk about some of the writing influences
on my life, some of my favorite books,
and just how I think about things.
So I'll give you that now.
Here is me talking at the Bastrop Public Library,
answering some questions about Stoicism and reading.
And next time I do a talk, I hope to see you there.
I know I'm doing one in New York
at the Barnes and Noble in Union Square
on the 11th at 6 p.m.
So I'm gonna be doing a talk there,
answering questions just like this about the new book.
So if you wanna come out to that,
I will see you in New York City.
I think you can get the info on their website.
But without further ado, here's me talking books at the Bastrop Public Library.
You've spoken about the philosophy of daily dying. When your present gift of life comes to an end,
which I hope is a very long time from now.
Yeah, you're gonna jinx me.
I won't, I won't.
What do you hope will be said or written about?
I don't think that much about that.
It's not really something that you control.
I think someone told me once, legacy is not for you,
which I think about, you know, part of the reason that we are often so motivated
to achieve or accomplish or make stuff is we think we're, it's like some little version
of immortality. Psychologists call this the denial of death. You know, if you just become
rich enough or write enough things or produce some work of art, it's some way of
surviving. I think the Stokes would say, you're still dead. So, you know, being discovered 200
years after your death or still being in print, you know, doesn't mean anything to Alexander the
Great that Alexandria is still named after him. No, he doesn't know.
And this is something even in Marcus Aurelius's time
that he's trying to remember himself of,
he's trying to remind himself of.
And then the really humbling thing
is even if you do really accomplish something,
I mean, how many people remember three vice presidents ago,
or even three presidents ago, you get forgotten pretty quickly. So I, I just try to do good work
that I'm proud of. And I try, I, it's not easy. And it's been a
journey for me, but I have tried to get to a place where more and
more of the win of whatever it is that I'm doing is locked in
before it even comes out. And so if how it does on the bestseller list
or how many copies it sells,
or if people say I did a great job,
whatever, obviously you want all that,
but if that's what I am needing to justify the thing
or to have made it all worth it,
then basically what I've done is I've handed over
my happiness or a sense of
self to a thing that's unpredictable, you know?
And so I've got, I think I've gotten to a place where I'm more and more content each
time having gotten to do it and then what I ultimately did and then the other stuff
is extra.
You still care, but I feel like there used to be this tool was called novel rank. And it was basically the most manipulative, addictive thing you could imagine
creating for a writer. You would type in the ISBN for your book, and it would show you
its rank on every Amazon in every country and then every other site that sells books. And so you'd be like, you could just refresh it
and just see every day.
And I remember the day when it got shut down going like,
I've just been given an incredible gift.
You know, I used to check more, like how it's doing.
And I kind of use almost that as a metric.
Like I think early in my career,
I looked to see how things were selling
to see if I was doing good or not.
And I think now I look at how often I'm looking
to see if I'm doing good or not.
And I don't look very much.
And every once in a while,
I'll get something like I'll be CC'd on an email
or my agent will be like,
hey, did you know this?
And if it's good news, I'm like, thanks. And then if it's not
good news, I'm like, I wish you hadn't told me. So I just try to
I just try to think about it less. And the paradoxical thing
about it. And this I sure this sounds like nonsense, unless
you're in that position. But weirdly, the less I have cared
about it, and the less I have thought about it, the better
they have done. And I
don't think that's some magical intention thing. I think it's just instead of spending
that energy hoping, I just spent it making better stuff. And then also my expectations
are lower and I'm more easily pleased.
Okay. In your opinion, how important is teaching reading to children of what age?
I would say very important. The most important thing, yeah, I mean, if you're not trying
to raise a reader, like, what are you doing? I don't know anyone who doesn't want their
kid to read. There's some quote I like where it's like it's almost a criminal offense to raise your kid
in a house without books. And I totally agree with that. And, you know, my life has been shaped by
books. I feel so grateful to have been like, I was just thinking about the other day, like,
talking to someone who was pretty young, and I was just thinking about how many wonderful books
they don't even know exist yet, right?
And the joy of getting to discover those books
for the first time, what an incredible future
they have ahead of them if they choose to do it.
So, you know, books are just this,
I think Stephen, was it Stephen King?
He said books are uniquely portable magic.
You know, it's just, it's an incredible,
an incredible thing.
And one of the things you really see when you read
is just how influential books have been
to the people that you like.
Marcus Rilius' life has changed in his 20s
when his philosophy teacher, Junius Roussicus,
gives him a copy of Epictetus' lectures.
And he's writing about it as an old man in meditations, like that he's so grateful that he loaned him this copy of this book.
And then I have that same experience, you know, 2,000 years later,
and, you know, many people in between and after will have that experience.
It's just such a wonderful thing.
So I just, I love books.
I love any place there are books.
I love any way to get books.
And so far, the kids seem like they love books. I love any place there are books. I love any way to get books. And, and so far, the kids seem like they
love books. They have access to things that I didn't and in that
like, you know, audio books are this wonderful thing now. And I
try not to be a snob about about what how people consume books
because as like a physical book person who,
one of the reasons I don't use libraries is that I must write in books.
And you guys frown upon that for some strange reason.
But so I'm that way. But you know, now I think something like 60% of my sales are digital,
either audio or ebook. And so, you know, whatever gets people reading
is wonderful in my view. And, you know, I probably would have fallen in love with audiobooks if
someone told me you could get the benefits of reading without reading. I one of the things I
like about planes is that it's like some of the only screen free time that I get, you know,
no, it's only physical. Samantha's the same way. So the problem is
when we travel, going there is fine, but it's usually the coming back because we've accumulated
so many books during the trip. We've had to mail back books many times, but only physical
for me. And I mean, I'm going through this now. I'm doing the fourth book in my virtue
series and you know, just the experience of being able to draw from my own
library books that I read and took notes on 10 or 15 years
ago, and not having known what I would need them for. And then
then filling perfectly the thing like that. That's one of when
Stephen King said the books are magic. That's a magical thing
that I think, you know,
the most dedicated readers get to experience,
but it really is a magical thing
when you have exactly what you need.
It's like going back in time,
or it's like you flashed forward
all these years in the future.
You didn't know you would need that thing,
or that that passage that you read when you were 20
would matter to you, you know, a decade later, whatever.
That's just my absolute favorite thing.
Thank you for that.
Would you say that the books that you write
are geared only towards working professionals, adults?
How do you feel about the current generation
of young adults as far as like discipline is destiny, pa.
One of the coolest things that happens in the bookstore
is someone will come in and they're usually older than me
and they'll be doing something and then they'll say
that their kids turned them onto my books.
And I love that multi-generation.
First off, I love anytime, I was just, I was in San Diego
and I was talking to this driver
and he was talking about,
his son had turned him on to all this weird music.
And I was just, I love any time, you know,
a parent is open-minded enough to like,
learn about things from their kids.
And I love that shared connection.
I love it most when it's about books, you know?
And so it's always cool that like,
their kid saw a YouTube video or a TikTok or something and read this book. And then they they made their dad or their mom read it. That's that's like my favorite thing. So I don't know who the books are for or not for you try to make them for everyone. But then you also understand if you are for everyone, you're probably for no one. So it's just kind of a thing you kind of you're you're kind of always talking to yourself with this hope that there's a lot of you out there
and you don't know. I mean when I wrote The Obstacles Away I definitely knew
that there had been certain classical works that had crossed over like in the
business world. You know whether it's Machiavelli or Sun Tzu and I maybe I
definitely was thinking that it would work in the business world and it's
funny like for some reason I don't know where they're categorized here, but most bookstores have my books in the business section
Just because that's where the obstacles way was for it's called bisect. That's how they're categorized books
That's where it was categorized at first and I think they just they tried to keep them all together
So sometimes people go like I went to the philosophy section
They didn't have them probably more people shop in the business section than the philosophy section. So, you know, it doesn't
bother me. But you just hope it's for as many people as possible.
Yeah. Well, I do know that Chief Canalist, who's the ROTC director at the high school,
starts every class day with a daily Stoic.
Really? Oh, man.
And he said that his students have become very self-sufficient, that sometimes he'll
come in late because he's
been in a meeting and that they've started things based on the stoic message that they got that day.
So it's cool. Well, my, so I did the Daily Stoke with Steve Hanselman, who is my longtime book
agent. He sold my first book and I sort of like a father figure to me as a dear friend. And when I,
so I'd done The Obstacles of the Way and I was writing Ego as the Enemy and he figure to me is a dear friend. And when I, so I'd done the obstacles away and I was writing Ego is the Enemy.
And he said to me, you know, we should do,
he said, you should do a book, a page a day of Stoicism.
And I said, what's a page a day book?
I didn't even know that that was a thing.
And he showed me some, he'd published like the Daily Drucker
when he had been at HarperCollins.
And so I was like, oh, this is cool.
And I said, but I see there's only one problem.
I don't speak Greek or Latin.
How am I supposed to do these translations?
And he said, oh, I'll do them.
And I said, have you been holding out on me?
You speak Greek and Latin?
Why did this just come up?
So he did all those.
And then he said, I think it'll be your bestselling book.
And I said, that sounds like something an agent would say.
And I thought you were just saying,
I thought he was just being nice.
And, you know, lo and behold,
it's become this whole sort of sensation,
which I know no one expected
because if my publisher had any inclination,
they grievously screwed me over
by the advance that they offered.
So I think, like nobody thought it would be a thing.
You know, in retrospect, it's always clear, you know,
oh, of course, but at the time,
I think everyone was hoping, you know,
for a modest reception and it's become this whole movement,
which is really cool.
Other than Robert Greene and Seneca, Aurelius,
who would you say has had the greatest influence
on your personal life?
As an author?
No, as Ryan.
Oh, oh, well, my wife probably who, you know, it's funny.
So I have my copy of Meditations.
I bought mine on Amazon and Amazon Prime didn't exist.
And I remember waiting for it to arrive.
I remember I had to buy some other books
because Prime didn't exist.
And for you kids, you just have to spend $25 on Amazon
for free shipping.
And so I bought it and that book changed my mind.
But then I took it off the shelf a couple of years ago
and I thought it was my copy and I opened it
and there was a receipt in it.
And the receipt was from Borders in Riverside, California.
And I was checking the date and I realized that this was like a week or two after my
wife and I had gone on our first date.
And I had just read the book and I had mentioned it and then she went and bought it.
And so it's her copy.
And we're still together all these years later with two kids in this bookstore together.
So probably almost certainly her.
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