The Daily Stoic - Put All Of Your Energy Into This | Practice Letting Go
Episode Date: November 20, 2023Amazon tells us that’s one of the most highlighted passages in the digital version of Stillness is the Key. It’s an idea that’s impossible to disentangle from Stoicism. Epictetus said t...here were things that were up to us and some things were not. Ok, but then what? Remind yourself, Marcus Aurelius writes in Meditations, that the past and the future are not in our power, only the present is. ✉️ 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. Each day we bring you a meditation inspired by the
ancient Stoics illustrated with stories from history, current events,
and literature to help you be better at what you do.
And at the beginning of the week,
we try to do a deeper dive,
setting a kind of Stoic intention for the week,
something to meditate on, something to think on,
something to leave you with, to journal about
whatever it is you're happy to be doing.
So let's get into it.
Put all of your energy into this. The less energy we waste regretting the past
or worrying about the future, the more energy we have
for what's in front of us.
Amazon tells us that this is actually one of the most highlighted passages in the digital version
of my book, Stillness is the Key.
It's an idea that's actually impossible to disentangle from stoicism.
Epic T2 said there were things that were up to us and some things that were not.
Okay, but then what?
Well, as Mark Serely says, we must remind ourselves that the past and the future are not in our power
only the present is.
You have to try to live in the very now.
It's the only thing that exists.
It is the only thing that is true.
Our memories of what's past, degrade, and then betray us.
Our thoughts of what is to come are never accurate.
Now is all there is and all that is real.
So Marcus wrote, give yourself a gift, the present moment. Live immediately,
Santa Cah wrote, give yourself a gift of truth and reality. And when you do, when you put all of your
energy into the present, you can be sure you are using that energy wisely, free of regret and worry.
What a present that is. If you haven't read Stillness is the key, I would love for you to do it.
Super proud of the book. It came out in 2019 and I think it's held up well.
It certainly held up well for me during the pandemic.
When suddenly there was sort of a forced stillness
in the sense that things we used to do went away.
But then there was an inner turmoil
that had to be still than quell
if I was to have any sort of hope and happiness
and contentment acceptance.
And I also have, you hear that, these are my keys.
When I walk into the office every morning,
I use a key that says stillness on it
that we sell in the Daily Stoke store
that you might like to check out.
You can check out all that stuff,
including sign copies of stillness is the key,
at store.dailystoke.com. Practice letting go.
We suffer when we lose things we love, and we suffer most when we lose people we love.
But it is a natural, unavoidable part of life. And the stoic say that this suffering is increased by our belief that we possess the objects
of our love.
They are, as we like to say, a part of us.
This belief doesn't increase our love or care for them, but rather is a form of cleaning
that ignores the simple fact that we don't control what will happen, not to our own bodies,
let alone to the ones we love.
Epic Titus taught a powerful exercise that every time you wish a dear child,
their family member or friend, good night, you remember that these things are like a precious
breakable glass. Remember how dramatically things can change while you sleep.
Marcus too struggled to practice this with his own family as he tucked them in at night.
And the point wasn't to be morbid, but to create a sense of appreciation
and a kind of humility where you cannot take anyone,
especially someone you love for granted.
And then the quotes are from Epictetus in Seneca.
Epictetus says, whenever you experience the pangs
of losing something, don't treat it like a part of yourself
but as a breakable glass so that when it falls, you will remember that and won't be troubled.
So too, whenever you kiss your child, sibling or friend, don't layer on top of the experience,
all the things you might wish, but hold them back and stop them, just as those who ride
behind triumphate, generals remind them that they are mortal.
The same way, remind yourself that your precious one isn't one of your possessions.
It's something given for now, not forever.
That's Epicetus' discourse is 324.
But the wise person can lose nothing.
Such a person has everything stored up for themselves, leaving nothing to fortune.
Their own goods are held firm, bound in virtue, which requires nothing from chance, and therefore can't be either
increased or diminished, Senika, on the firmness of the wise.
We did a daily stoke email recently that I wanted to read you or chunk of it.
Let me pull it up here.
The moment when after many years of hard work and a long voyage, you stand in the center
of your room, house, half acre, square mile, island, country, knowing at last how you got there,
and you say, I own this.
In the same moment, the trees unloose,
their soft arms from around you,
the birds take back their language,
the cliffs, fissure and collapse.
The air moves back from you like a wave,
and you can't breathe, know they whisper,
you own nothing. You were a visitor time after time,
climbing the hill, planting the flag, proclaiming, we never belonged to you. You never found us.
It was always the other way around. I just think that's such a beautiful poem. And look, when there's a part of what
Santa Cahir that stops me, he says, so that when the glass falls, you will remember that and
won't be troubled. Now, I don't think that's quite right. We know that Santa Cahir lost a child
and grieved quite deeply. We know that his mother grieved him quite deeply when he was
exiled and he in turn grieved his mother. We know that he and his wife struggled at their parting when
they were forced to commit suicide. The idea that this still can just think these things and then
not be attached to people, I think that's a false ideal. And I don't think that's where
you actually want to get, even if you could get there. To me, what epictetus is exercise,
what Marcus is doing. And it's when I practice almost every day during the pandemic, when,
especially in those dark early days, when it seemed very, very serious, not that it wasn't serious,
but it seemed so much more
uncertain the seriousness of it.
The idea of holding your children close and saying that you don't know what's going to
happen through the night is there to make you breathe that moment in, to not rush through
it, to not try to get it over with, right?
So you can go check your email or watch Netflix or, you know, have a snack, right?
It's to go, no, this is important.
I'm not going to rush through this.
I'm not going to get past it.
I am going to breathe it in because it matters because it's here now.
To me that this is a breakable glass doesn't mean,
put it up on the highest shelf,
wrapping and bubble wrap and hope nothing bad ever happens to it.
It's to appreciate it while you have it,
to realize that you don't have it forever,
because none of us do.
That's what I take from that exercise.
And you know that was brought home to me even more
during almost a year exactly from, you know, March of 2020
when this freak storm hits Texas.
And I, you know, everyone tucked their kid in at night,
they lost power.
And a few families woke up and found that their children
or older family members had died in their sleep,
had frozen to death in their sleep.
I had gotten so cold, so unexpectedly. You just think about how tragic that is and how that could happen
to anyone. And you realize how much worse it would feel
if you'd had an argument before bed,
if you'd been short before bed.
If you'd said no, I said only two books,
and now you want me to read a third one, right?
You would regret that.
It would be tragic in any circumstances.
Again, the idea that you would get to a place
where you would not care that it happened.
I don't think that's right. Marcus Aurelis loses multiple children, multiple children that's insane,
unthinkable, and even in meditations, you get the sense that he's still grieving, still working through it.
So you don't get there, but you do hopefully get to a place where you can minimize the regrets.
So you're not sitting there kicking yourself saying,
I wish I'd been more patient.
I wish I'd been there more period.
I wish I hadn't rushed through things.
While I had them, I really loved them.
I really connected with them.
I wasn't detached from them.
I was attached to them.
And that's why this tragedy is the least bad version of how it could go.
That's not the happiest way to leave you today, but I do think it's a powerful exercise
and we're thinking about, and I'll talk to you soon. Hey, Prime Members, you can listen to the Daily Stoic early and ad-free on Amazon Music,
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