The Daily Stoic - Prepare Yourself To Answer The Call | Courage Is Calling: Preface & Introduction
Episode Date: September 28, 2021Ryan explains why you must be prepared when you are called upon, on today’s Daily Stoic Podcast.Ryan Holiday’s new book Courage Is Calling: Fortune Favors The Brave is out today...! You can still get the preorder bonuses at https://dailystoic.com/courageiscallingSign up for the Daily Stoic email: https://DailyStoic.com/emailFollow 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.
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Hi, I'm David Brown, the host of Wondery's podcast business wars. And in our new season, Walmart must fight off target.
The new discounter that's both savvy and fashion forward. Listen to business wars on Amazon Music or wherever you get your podcasts.
on music or wherever you get your podcasts. 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 every day 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 dailystowett.com.
Prepare yourself to answer the call.
At some point, you're going to get it.
Perhaps you'll hold elected office.
Perhaps you'll witness something unethical at work.
Perhaps you'll be a scientist pursuing a controversial or unorthodox idea.
Perhaps you'll have a dream for a new business. Perhaps you'll be an athlete
considering a political stand that will jeopardize your career, your endorsements.
The exact circumstances don't matter. What matters is that one day you're going
to get the call for courage. To each Winston Churchill would say, there comes in
their lifetime a special moment when they are figuratively tapped on the shoulder and offered the chance to do a very special thing unique to them and fitted to their talents.
What a tragedy if that moment finds them unprepared or unqualified for that which could have been their finest hour. In actuality life offers many of these moments
and you will get many such taps on the shoulder.
Maybe you will get the tap to serve,
to take a risk, to challenge the status quo,
to run towards danger while others run away,
to rise above your station, to do a thing
that people tell you is impossible.
And the question is whether you will feel these taps when they come,
or will you mistake them for any number of the many reasons you have to think that what is being
asked of you is the wrong thing to do. Will you be pressured to put your dreams out of your mind?
Will fear make itself felt? Will you let it prevent you from answering the call? Will you leave the
phone ringing? Will your moment find you unprepared?
Will your finest hour pass you by? What a tragedy that would be. What could be more important
than making sure that doesn't happen, than preparing inching closer and closer to doing
what you were put here to do? I would say nothing. Your job is to prepare for when the
phone rings, for when you get tapped on the shoulder,
because the one thing we know for certain is that the call is going to come.
Will you be prepared to answer?
And look, today is a very, very, very big day for me.
My new book, Courage is Calling, hits shelves today.
It's the first book in a four book series I've been hard at work on,
on the four virtues, temperance justice wisdom and
This book means so much to me. It's been a labor of love
I wrote it in the middle of the pandemic as it felt like the world was breaking down
There's so many wonderful moments of courage and inspiration and leadership and then many moments of the exact opposite
You know courage has always been in short supply, but I think we have this sense now
of how important it truly is and the cost of its absence. So I hope you can check out the new
book. You can order it anywhere, books are sold. We're still offering the pre-order bonuses if you
go to dailystoak.com slash pre-order. It would mean so much to me for you to support it. This first
week of sales matters a great deal.
If you could go to dailystowoc.com slash preorder,
support the book, one copy, five copies, 20 copies,
there's a bunch of awesome preorder bonuses
I'd love for you to see, including a chance
to have dinner with me here at my bookstore,
the Painted Porch.
Just go to dailystowoc.com slash preorder,
pick up the book, we've got sign copies if you want to,
pick up the book, tell people about it, do what you can to support it, it mean a lot to me.
Writing this email, doing this podcast to you every day for so many years has been a
great honor for me.
If you could support the book, I would be so grateful.
Courage is calling the first book in my four virtue series, check it out dailystok.com slash
preorder.
Hey, it's Ryan, welcome to another very special episode
of the Daily Stowook podcast.
Because today, September 28th is launch day.
You know, just a couple of weeks ago,
I was in Bastrop State Park with my kids.
We went on this long walk as a family.
And one of the reasons we went was because,
as I wanted to bring this sort of full circle,
almost exactly two and a half years previous,
a little more than two and a half years previous,
I had gone through, I'd gone for a walk with my kids
and I put the work aside to go outside, do
something that's not work and this idea popped into my head, this idea about courage.
Now I didn't know where it was going to go, I didn't know it would be part of a series,
I didn't know any of that, but the idea popped into my head and thus in the midst of pursuing some momentary stillness and rest and pursuing a hobby I had this massive
work breakthrough that would tie up not just the next two or so years of my life, but as it appears
several more years as I work out the other books in the series. And it was cool to be able to hold in that park the actual copy of the book, which
had just arrived, just as it is now arriving in bookstores all over the country and of course
to the people who pre-ordered it. But in today's episode, I wanted to give you the intro of the book.
So I wanted to give you the intro of the book.
There's a, the way that this is set up, there's a preface about the four virtues
that will be consistent across all four books,
and then goes right into the intro,
which is sort of a celebration of the idea of courage,
and a call to courage, which as I've said,
I think is increasingly important
and essential in today's world. I recorded the
audiobook here in the depths of the July heat wave in Texas. It was stiflingly hot, but I powered
through. Couldn't go to a studio to record it because of the COVID surge, but it was wonderful
to record it and to bring it to you.
And in today's episode, I've got a sample of it.
Penguin Random House audio was nice enough
to allow me to post this to all of you.
So if you have ordered the book,
it should be on its way to you.
If you haven't, now's your chance.
It would mean so much to me if you could support
courage is calling.
We're still offering the pre-order bonuses
which you can get at dailystoward.com slash pre-order, but you can order the book
anywhere.
Barnes & Noble, Amazon, Audible, right?
This is the audiobook, so that's, it's a sample of what you'll get on Audible, or
iBooks or wherever you get your audiobooks.
You can get signed copies from me at my bookstore or at dailystoward.com.
And I really hope you like it.
I hope you support the book.
And I am very excited and honored to bring you this.
The introduction of my new book, Courage is Calling Fortune
Favors the Brave.
The Four Virtues.
It was long ago now that Hercules came to the crossroads, at a quiet intersection in
the hills of Greece and the shade of Nabi pine trees, the great hero of Greek myth,
first met his destiny.
Where exactly it was or when no one knows, we hear of this moment in the stories of
Socrates, we can see it captured in the most
beautiful art of the Renaissance. We can feel his budding energy, his strapping muscles, his
anguish in the classic Bach cantata. If John Adams had had his way in 1776, Hercules at the
Crossroads would have been immortalized on the official seal of the newly
founded United States.
Because there before the man's undying fame, before the twelve labors, before he changed
the world, Hercules faced a crisis, one as life-changing and real as any of us have
ever faced.
Where was he headed?
Where was he trying to go?
That's the point of the story.
Alone, unknown, unsure, hercules, like so many, did not know.
Where the road diverged lay a beautiful goddess who offered him every temptation he could imagine.
Adorned in finery, she promised him a life
of ease. She swore he'd never taste want or unhappiness or fear or pain. Follow her,
she said, and his every desire would be fulfilled.
On the other path stood a stoner goddess, in a pure white robe. She made a quieter call. She promised no rewards except those that came as a result of hard work.
It would be a long journey, she said. There would be sacrifice. There would be scary moments.
But it was a journey fit for a God. It would make him the person his ancestors meant him to be. Was this real? Did it really happen? If it's only legend,
doesn't matter? Yes, because this is a story about us, about our dilemma, about our own
crossroads. For Hurt Gileese, the choice was between vice and virtue, the easy way and
the hard way, the well-trod path and the road less traveled.
We all face this choice.
Hezotating only for a second Hercules chose the one that made all the difference.
He chose virtue.
Virtue can seem old-fashioned, yet virtue, eroté, translates into something very simple and very timeless.
Excellence, moral, physical, mental.
In the ancient world, virtue was comprised of four key components,
courage, temperance, justice, wisdom.
The touchstones of goodness, the philosopher came Marcus Aurelius called them.
To millions, they're known as the Cardinal virtues.
Four near universal ideals adopted by Christianity,
and most of Western philosophy, but equally valued in Buddhism, Hinduism,
and just about every other philosophy you can imagine.
They're called Cardinal, C.S. Lewis pointed out,
not because they came down from church
authorities, but because they originate from the Latin Cardo or hinge. It's pivotal stuff. It's
the stuff that the door to the good life hangs on. There also are four topics for this book, for this series, four books, four virtues, one aim to help you choose.
Courage, bravery, fortitude, honor, sacrifice.
Temperance, self-control, moderation, composure, balance.
Justice, fairness, service, fellowship, goodness, kindness, wisdom, knowledge, education, truth, self-reflection, peace.
These are the key to a life of honor, of glory, of excellence in every sense.
Character traits that John Steinbach perfectly described as pleasant and desirable to their owner
and makes him perform acts of which he can be proud and with which he can be pleased.
But the she must be taken to mean all of humankind.
There was no feminine version of the word vertus in Rome.
Virtue wasn't male or female.
Just was.
It still is.
It doesn't matter if you're a man or a woman. It doesn't matter if you're physically strong or painfully shy,
a genius or of average intelligence. Virtue is universal imperative.
The virtues are interrelated and inseparable, yet each is distinct from the others.
Doing the right thing almost always takes courage.
from the others. Doing the right thing almost always takes courage. Justice discipline is impossible without the wisdom to know what is worth choosing. What good is courage if not
applied to justice? What good is wisdom if it doesn't make us more modest? North, south, east, west,
the four virtues are a kind of compass. There's a reason that the four points on a compass are called the cardinal directions.
They guide us. They show us where we are and what is true.
Aristotle described virtue as a kind of craft, something to pursue just as one pursues the mastery
of any profession or skill. We become builders by building and we become harpists by playing the harpy rights. Similarly, then, we become just by doing just actions,
temperate by doing temperate actions,
brave by doing brave actions.
Virtue is something we do.
It's something we choose.
Not once for Hercules' Cross Road was not a singular event. It is a daily challenge. One we face not once but constantly
repeatedly, when we be selfish or selfless, brave or afraid, strong or weak, wise or stupid.
When we cultivate a good habit or a bad one, courage or cowardice, the bliss of ignorance or the challenge of a new idea,
stay the same or grow, the easy way or the right way. Introduction.
There is no deed in this life so impossible that you cannot do it. Your whole life should be lived as a heroic
deed, Leo Tolstoy. There is nothing we prize more than courage, yet nothing is in shorter
supply. Is that just how it goes? That things are prized because they are rare? Possibly,
but courage, the first of the four cardinal virtues, is not a precious stone. It is not a
diamond, a product of some billion-year timeless process. It is not oil, which must be drawn from the
earth. These are not finite resources doled out randomly by fortune, or accessible only to some.
or accessible only to some. No, it is something much simpler. It is renewable. It's there in each of us everywhere. It's something that we are capable of in a
moment's notice and matters big and small, physical, moral. There are unlimited
even daily opportunities for it and work at home everywhere. And yet it remains so rare. Why? Because we are afraid,
because it's easier to not get involved, because we have something else we're working on, and now
is not a good time. I am not a soldier, we say, as if fighting on the battlefield is the only form of courage that
the world needs.
We'd rather stick with what's safe, me, heroic?
That seems egotistical, preposterous.
We leave it to someone else, someone more qualified, better trained, with less to lose,
understandable, even logical.
But if everyone thinks that way, where does it leave us?
Must one point out the writer and Soviet dissident Alexander Solzhenitsyn said that from ancient
times a decline in courage has been considered the first symptom of the end.
Conversely the greatest moments in human history all share one thing, whether it's landing
on the moon or civil rights, the final stand at Thermopoly
or the art of the Renaissance, the bravery of ordinary men and women, people who did what needed
to be done, people who said, if not me and who. Courage is courage, is courage. It's long been held that there are two kinds of courage, physical and moral.
Physical courage is a night riding into battle.
It's a firefighter rushing into a burning building.
It's an explorer setting out for the Arctic, defying the elements.
Moral courage is a whistleblower taking on powerful interests.
It's the truth teller who says what no one else will say. It's the entrepreneur going into business for themselves against all odds.
The martial courage of the soldier and the mental courage of the scientist.
But it doesn't take a philosopher to see that these are actually the same thing.
There aren't two kinds of courage. There is only one. The kind where you put your ass on the line.
In some cases, literally, perhaps fatally. In other cases, it's figurative or financial.
Courage is risk. It is sacrifice, commitment, perseverance, truth, determination.
When you do the thing that others cannot or will not do, when you do the thing people think you shouldn't or can't do.
Otherwise, it's not courage. You have to be braving something or someone.
Still courage remains something hard to define. We know it when we see it, but it's hard to say it.
Accordingly, the aim of this book is not definitions. Rare, then a rare gem, courage is something we must hold up to inspect for many angles.
By looking at its many parts and cuts, its perfections, its flaws, we can come away with
an understanding of the value of the whole.
Each of these perspectives gives us a little more insight.
But we do not do this to understand virtue in the abstract, of course.
Each of us faces our own
Herkulean crossroads.
Perhaps we hold elected office.
Perhaps we've witnessed something unethical at work.
Perhaps we're parents trying to raise good kids
in a terrifying tempting world.
Maybe we're a scientist pursuing a controversial
or unorthodox idea.
Maybe we have a dream for a new business.
Maybe we're a foot soldier in the
infantry on the eve of battle or an athlete about to push the limits of human performance.
What these situations call for is courage in real terms right now. Will we have it? Will we
answer the phone that's ringing? To each Winston Churchill would say there comes in their lifetime a special moment
when they are figuratively tapped on the shoulder and offered the chance to do a very special thing
unique to them and fitted to their talents. What a tragedy if that moment finds them unprepared or
unqualified for that which could have been their finest hour. It's more accurate to say that life has many of these moments, many such
taps on the shoulder. Churchill had to persevere through a difficult
childhood with unloving parents. It took courage to ignore the teachers who thought him
dumb, to head off as a young war correspondent, then to be taken prisoner and make a harrowing
escape. It takes guts to run for public office. It took courage each time he published something as a writer.
There was the decision to change political parties to enlist in World War One
the awful years in the political wilderness when opinion turned against him.
Then there was the rise of Hitler and standing alone against Nazism in his finest hour of finest hours.
But there was also the courage to carry on when he was tossed ungrateful out of political
life again, in the wilderness again, and the courage to come back once more.
The courage to take up painting in old age and put his work out in the world, to stand
up against Stalin and the Iron Curtain, and on and on and on.
Were there failures of courage along the way, too?
Mistakes made? Opportun, opportunities not taken,
undoubtedly?
But let us look to the courageous moments and learn from them rather than focus on another's
flaws as a way of excusing our own.
In the lies of all the greats, we find the same themes.
There was a pivotal moment of courage, but there were many smaller ones too. Rosa Parks on the bus is courage,
but so too were her 42 years of life in the South as a black woman without losing hope, without becoming
bitter. Her courage to pursue her legal case against segregation was simply the continuation of the
courage it took for her just to join the NAACP in 1943 to work there openly as a secretary and even more in 1945
when she successfully registered to vote in Alabama. History is written with blood, sweat,
and tears, and it is etched into eternity by the quiet endurance of courageous people.
People who stood up or sat down, people who fought, people who risked, people who spoke, people who stood up or sat down, people who fought, people who
risked, people who spoke, people who tried, people who conquered their fears, who
acted with courage, and in some cases briefly achieved that higher plane of
existence, they entered the hall of heroes as peers and equals. Courage calls each
of us differently at different times in different forms, but in every case
it is, as they say, coming from inside the house.
First we are called to rise above our fear and cowardice.
Next we are called to bravery over the elements, over the odds, over our limitations.
Finally, we are called to heroism, perhaps for only just a single, magnificent moment
when we are called to do something for someone other than ourselves.
Whatever call you're hearing right now, what matters is that you answer.
What matters is that you go to it.
In an ugly world, courage is beautiful.
It allows beautiful things to exist.
Who says it has to be so rare?
You started listening to this book, because you know that it doesn't.
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