The Daily Stoic - Little is Needed for the Happy Life
Episode Date: May 8, 2024💪 Check out the Wealthy Stoic course at dailystoic.com/wealthy✉️ Sign up for the Daily Stoic email: https://dailystoic.com/dailyemail🏛 Check out the Daily Stoic Store ...;for Stoic inspired products, signed books, and more.📱 Follow us: Instagram, Twitter, YouTube, TikTok, 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, where each day we bring you a passage of ancient
wisdom designed to help you find strength, insight, and wisdom in everyday life.
Each one of these passages is based on the 2,000-year-old philosophy that has guided
some of history's greatest men and women.
For more, you can visit us at dailystoic.com.
Little is needed for the happy life. Zeno came to Stoicism with nothing. He lost it all in a shipwreck and rebuilt his life. Cleanthes, his first-grade student, was not much better off
making a living as a manual laborer in Athens.
Epictetus would come from slavery, something quite worse than poverty. He afterwards became free.
Thomas Wentworth Higginson would write in his 1865 translation of Epictetus, which is a good
translation by the way, although I recommend the Penguin edition or Robin Waterfield's recent translation. But Higginson says that Epictetus lived very frugally
at Rome teaching philosophy.
Simplicus says that the whole furniture of his house
consisted of a bed, cooking vessel, and an earthen lamp.
And Lucian ridicules a man who bought the latter
after his death in hopes to become a philosopher
by using it.
It was this tradition, ironically,
that would so prepare Marcus Aurelius
for a life in an imperial palace.
From boyhood, he had been training
in the stoic and cynic model.
By sleeping on a hard mattress and wearing rough clothes,
he didn't want to be soft.
He didn't want to be spoiled.
By the time he assumed the purple cloak of the emperor,
he was indifferent to the
trappings of wealth and power. He could enjoy them without needing them or feeling entitled to them.
In fact, he told the Roman Senate that as far as he knew, he lived in the people's house,
owned none of it. And that's why during the Antonine Plague, he had no problem selling off
jewels and furniture, even his wife's robes to fund the government. Very little is needed to make a happy life, Marcus Grealius would write in meditations.
It is all within yourself, in your way of thinking. For Marcus, this was something he had to trust
Epictetus and Zeno and Cleanthes on. He never had to experience poverty and loss like they did,
but he faced his own challenges. Wealth and abundance could have easily skewed his compass or corrupted his soul.
But reminded by their example and reinforced
by his own practices, by the adversity and difficulty
he schooled himself in,
he could practice his own methods of detachment
and he found his own form of happiness and self-sufficiency.
And so must we, whether we're born rich or poor,
the simpler our lives, the better.
What we need is within us. Who we are has nothing to do with our stuff or what's in our bank account.
And certainly these material things are not the path to peace or happiness. And actually, these are some of the ideas we did this thing called the wealthy stoic, which is a stoic
sort of challenge course on the stoic attitudes about money and finance and earnings
and investing and all of that.
And it's a play.
The wealthy stoic is not necessarily the richest one.
I would argue that Zeno and Cleanthes and Epictetus
were rich because money had very little sway over them.
But anyways, you can check that out.
I'll link to it in today's show notes.
Or you can sign up for Daily Stoic Life
and get that course and all the Stoic courses for free
at dailystoiclife.com.
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