The Daily Stoic - No One Can Hold Anything Over You | Keeping “The News” In Check
Episode Date: July 24, 2023Many of the Stoics were powerful and privileged. Marcus Aurelius was born to a wealthy family and then was given the throne and the empire. Cato came from an old and prestigious family. But n...ot all the Stoics were so lucky–Epictetus was born a slave. His teacher Musonius was exiled multiple times. Admiral James Stockdale, whose heroics we’ve spoken of often, was from an ordinary American family in Illinois.Yet advantaged or disadvantaged, all the Stoics possessed a certain power, a certain freedom by way of their philosophy.---And today's entry of The Daily Stoic Journal, Ryan discusses why even the Stoics struggled with maintaining a balanced information diet, and therefore preached the benefits of favoring the everlasting wisdom found in books over daily news.If you want to become a better reader, the Stoics can help. We built out their best insights into our Read to Lead: A Daily Stoic Reading Challenge. Since it first launched in 2019, Read to Lead has been our most popular challenge, taken on by almost ten thousand participants. Sign up today!✉️ 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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Hi, I'm David Brown, the host of Wonder Woman's Podcast Business Wars.
And in our new season, two of the world's leading hotel brands, Hilton and Marriott,
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Welcome to the Daily Stoic Podcast.
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No one can hold anything over you. Many of the Stoics were powerful and privileged.
Marcus Aurelius was born to a wealthy family and then he was given the throne in the empire.
Cato came from an old and prestigious family, but not all of the Stoics were so lucky.
Aptetus was born a slave. His teacher Musonius was exiled multiple times.
Admiral James Stockdale, whose heroics we've spoken about often was from an ordinary American family in Illinois. Yet, advantaged or disadvantaged, all the Stoics possessed
a certain power, a certain freedom, by way of their philosophy. The Stoics, rich and
poor alike were equally independent and defiant. They were in command of themselves. They knew
what was good and what wasn't. They knew what was true and what wasn't. And no one through force or temptation could make them think otherwise.
If you can read in at least one language, then you have this,
the tool to educate yourself.
The great Lava Burton said before receiving a lifetime achievement Emmy Award last year,
no one can hold sway over your mind, your imagination, your dreams, if you can read.
Or as Epictetus said a couple centuries earlier, the educated are free.
A strong mind, a mind that knows how to learn, that knows how to get to the core of things,
this is a mind that is stronger than tyrants, than slave owners, than serpent-tongued manipulators.
They might be able to throw you in jail or bombard you with this information, but they
can't actually get to what matters within you.
That's a power that you have.
That's something that can only be relinquished
as Stockdale found.
In fact, he was to the chagrin of his captors,
often more informed about communist doctrine
than they were, having red marks in the original.
Reading is your reinforcements.
Philosophy is freedom, stoicism is strength. Obviously,
you're a little bit of a reader. You wouldn't be listening to this or reading this if you weren't.
But if you want to get really into reading this year, we built the Daily Stoke Read to
Lead Challenge. As Truman said, not all readers are leaders, but all leaders have to be readers.
And it's just a great deep dive into how to be a reader, how to be a better reader, what to read,
some tips and tools and strategies about reading
from the Stoic's, from me, from my mentors,
from all the people we've interviewed here
at Daily Stoic over the years,
I can't recommend the Read to Lead Challenge enough.
I'll link to it in today's show notes.
And if you're thinking about joining Daily Stoic life,
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When we think of sports stories, we tend to think of tales of epic on the field glory. But the new podcast Sports Explains the World brings you some of the wildest and most surprising
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Keeping the news in check. Even the ancient news felt inundated with gossip and news.
This week you will face a barrage like they couldn't have imagined.
From texts, calls, emails to the incessant grind of the 24-7 news machine.
Instead of responding to every status update, every urgent call or the latest trending
in Cindi area news story, take a moment to remember the three ways that the Stokes
used to keep their focus on their purpose and duty in the present moment.
Number one, step away from the noise.
Two, remember that no news can throw you off the purpose of your present choices.
Three, don't add something negative or positive to what's being reported.
Here's two quotes from Marcus and one from Epic or positive to what's being reported.
Here's two quotes from Marcus and one from EpicTidus to guide you this week. Are you distracted by breaking news? Then take some leisure time to learn something good and stop bouncing around.
But when you do, keep in mind the other mistake. To be so distracted by getting control that you
wear yourself out and lose a purpose by which you can direct your thoughts and impulses.
That's meditation's two, seven.
Epic Titus' discourse is three, eight says, whenever disturbing news is delivered to
you, bear in mind that no news can be relevant to your reasoned choice.
Can anyone break news to you that your assumptions or desires are wrong no way?
But they can tell you someone died.
But even so, what is that to you?" And then
Marks really says, Meditations 8, 4, 9, he says, don't tell yourself anything more than
what the initial impressions report. It's been reported to you that someone is speaking
badly about you. This is the report. The report wasn't that you've been harmed. I see that
my son is sick, but not that his life is at risk. So always stay within your first impressions and don't add them to your head.
This way, nothing can happen to you.
Look, I think the number one secret to a good productive routine and personal happiness
is to limit your news consumption.
Obviously, I'm biased as an author, but read books, don't watch the news.
Read thoughtful perennial analysis, don't watch the news. Read thoughtful perennial analysis. Don't follow speculative news
reports. Limit your news consumption. And like, honestly, if you do feel like you need
the distraction, you need like a palakunzer, don't pull up CNN, pull up ESPN. Like, read
about sports or something, right? Read celebrity gossip. Don't read the latest divisive piece of news.
I'm not saying that it's not important to be informed.
Of course, it's important to be informed.
I would just argue that following the infinite news machine
is how one becomes informed.
I think, as I've said before, the great influenza,
a book that I read at the beginning of the pandemic,
taught me much more about how to spend the last 15 months than, you know, any breaking news story,
because the news story's never really changed anything. It's like, hey, this thing is real.
Here's the scientific advice. Take it seriously. Wait for it to be over, right? The latest report
is only adding to what we already know for the most part. So step back, don't consume so much news.
Couple recommendations on this front.
Obviously, one, my book Trust Me I'm Lying
is about how the news manipulates you.
But there's a great book by Daniel Boersten
called The Image that I Suggest People Read.
There's also Neil Postman's amusing ourselves to death.
These are two eye-opening books that will give you a sense of why you should
consume as little news as possible and how manipulative it is and how harmful it is. And then the other
book, which inspired my book, trust me, am I? If you read the jungle as a kid in high school or whatever,
Epton Sinclair's exposé of the meatpacking industry, then I strongly suggest you read his book,
The Brass Check, which is actually an exposé of the news industry around the same time.
And sadly, almost nothing has changed.
I'm not saying that reporters aren't good people.
I'm not saying that they don't do an important public service.
I'm not saying I read no news.
I'm just saying, look, the most viral emotion is anger.
Should it surprise us that the news perpetually
makes us angry, right? Should it surprise us that news is always breaking, but never fully
arrives, that they're always speculating? No, it's an enormous beast trying to capture
as much attention as possible to then sell that attention to advertisers. You are the
product that's being sold and you consume this free news, got to understand that.
Listen to podcasts, podcasts are great conversations.
Even this, like I'm recording this,
but it has no real date on it.
It should be relevant forever.
So I'm not as incentivized to rile you up
the way that your news is.
So I think it's interesting that even 2000 years ago,
the stills are struggling with it. the way that your news is. So I think it's interesting that even two thousand years ago, the
the Stokes are struggling with it. They'd be appalled at what our information diet is today. So
step back, give yourself some space. Don't follow breaking news. Don't let it change. Who you are,
don't let it rattle your equilibrium. Just keep doing you read books, study real wisdom and
information that will make you smarter and able to respond
to what's happening in the world and make you a better, more informed citizen. Hey, Prime Members!
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