The Daily Stoic - So, How Did You Do? | Think About It from the Other Person’s Perspective
Episode Date: March 14, 2022Ryan talks about the lasting impact that COVID-19 has had on the world around us, and reads this week’s meditation from The Daily Stoic Journal.For a limited time, UCAN is offering you 30% ...off on your first order when you use code STOIC at checkout Just go to UCAN.CO/STOICSign up for the 14-day Daily Stoic Alive Time Challenge to take control of your life and get the most out of your time.Sign 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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Hey, prime members, you can listen to the Daily Stoke Podcast early and add free on Amazon music. Download the app today.
Welcome to the Daily Stoke Podcast. Each day we bring you a meditation inspired by the ancient Stokes, 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 happen to be doing.
So let's get into it.
Hi, I'm David Brown, the host of Wundery's podcast business wars.
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It's been a year and then a year again is unbelievable as that is to write.
Time has dragged.
It is flown by.
So much has happened.
Fortunate and unfortunate.
But on March 14th, 2020, exactly two years ago,
we put up an episode on the Daily Stoke
about the rising threat of COVID-19.
And it's relation to that timeless stoic dictum
that we can't control what has happened,
but we can control how we respond. And we asked one year later and now we are asking again,
how did you do? 24 months, countless obstacles, countless difficulties, countless dilemmas
and stresses, but also a nearly infinite set of opportunities to practice this philosophy,
to focus on what you control, to try to make the most of a situation that we all found ourselves in.
Maybe you picked up running, or maybe you just doomscrolled.
Maybe you learned how to cook, or maybe you put on 30 pounds from all those delivery meals.
Maybe you moved to a different city, or maybe you barely got off the couch.
A core stoic practice is journaling
and what is journaling,
but the process of contemplation and self-reflection,
it's putting you and your actions up for review.
So take a minute to do that today.
Or more than a minute, don't line to yourself.
Look at your successes and be proud of them,
that you're still standing is no small feat.
Be grateful for that.
And sadly far too many of our fellow humans did not make it.
It's terrible to think that on March 14th, 2020,
just 65 Americans had died of COVID-19
by March 2021 over 500,000 people had perished in the United States and millions more globally.
And here in March of 2022, more than 900,000 are dead and gone.
Some 5.6 million around the world have lost their lives.
Others lost jobs or opportunities or experiences they can never get back.
We were all affected, but take a second to look
at where you were lucky, what you have to be grateful for,
what skillful, maneuvering, and resiliency
and random luck allowed you to endure and adapt.
Don't shy away from looking at your failures either.
Where did you waste time and energy?
Where did you fall short? What mistakes did you make? What bad Where did you waste time and energy? Where did you fall short?
What mistakes did you make?
What bad habits did you pick up or continue?
Were you part of the problem more often
than you were part of the solution?
And now let us learn from these successes and failures
vices and virtues so that the next time,
and there is always a next time, we can be better.
Better citizens, better people, better stoics.
It's been one hell of a year, it's been a hell of a two years.
But if we don't find meaning from this suffering, if we don't improve because of it, individually,
and collectively, then we have added harm on top of misfortune.
And that is inexcusable.
In March of 2020, we talked about this idea of a lifetime dead time.
How are we going to use that time? That's been the philosophy I've applied.
A bunch of us still ex-if tried to apply. And it's what I keep doing. Even as we enter what
mercifully appears to be a new phase of the pandemic, We still have to focus on that because so much
of life is out of our control. The the a lifetime challenge is still running. I think it's
still relevant. It's still donating money to people in need, which if you'd like to join
us, you're welcome to you can sign up at dailystoke.com slash a lifetime. And of course, if you're a
daily stoke life member, we're looking for an excuse to join. You can jump in there as
well. Be safe
everyone. I know I sound a little congested on this. I've been saying on the podcast, I am,
I do not have COVID, I know I do not have COVID, but I got sick and it's run me ragged for quite some
time, but I'm doing well and I hope you are too. Be safe and strong everyone.
Think about it from the other person's perspective. And this is from
this week's entry in the Daily Stoic Journal, 366 days of writing and reflection on the
art of living by yours truly and my co-writer and translator, Stephen Hanselman. I actually do this
journal every single day. There's a question in the morning, a question in the afternoon,
and there's these sort of weekly meditations.
As Epictetus says, every day and night,
we keep thoughts like this at hand,
write them, read them aloud, and talk to yourself,
and others about them.
You can check out the Daily Stoke Journal,
anywhere books are sold,
you can also get a signed personalized copy from me
in the Daily Stoke store, at store.dailystoke.com.
We tend to assume the best about our own intentions and the worst about other people.
Then we wonder why life is so full of conflict.
The Stoics flip this habit around, reminding themselves to be suspicious of their own first
reaction and approach others first with sympathy.
Powerful people are often surprisingly terrible at behaving this way, but Marcus
Arelius, the most powerful man on earth during his reign, was renowned for his humanity in
dealing with others. He told himself always to take a moment to remember his own failings,
and to contemplate how another might see the situation. He reminded himself as we should
that most people are
trying their best even though that's easy to lose sight of in the rough and
tumble of daily life. Let's remember that today and think about each
interaction from more than just our own point of view. That's the daily Stoic
journal weekly entry and we've got some quotes from Marcus Aurelius here. He says, whenever someone has done wrong by you,
immediately consider what notion of good or evil
they had in doing it.
For when you see that, you'll find compassion
instead of astonishment or rage.
For you yourself may have had the same notions
of good and evil or similar ones,
in which case you'll make an allowance
for what they've done.
But if you no longer hold the same notion, you'll be more readily gracious for their
heir.
Marcus Aurelius, Meditations, Seven, Twenty-six.
And then he says, when your sparring partner scratches or headbutts you, you don't then
make a show of it, or protest, or view view him with suspicion or as plotting against you.
And yet you keep an eye on him, not as an enemy or with suspicion, but with a healthy avoidance.
You should act this way with all things in life. We should give a past of many things with our
fellow trainees. For, as I've said, it's possible to avoid without suspicion or hate.
You know, I tell the story and still this is the key, I open part one, the perception
part of the book with the story of Kennedy and the Cuban Missile Crisis.
Kennedy and Krushchev face off over some nuclear ballistic missiles placed on the island of Cuba.
And what's so remarkable about this moment, why look at Kennedy and why I think
he embodies what Marcus really is talking about in both senses, both in the, why do they
do this, what are they trying to do? And also, you know, people are not great. They're
going to try to cheat or pull one over on you, but you can't let that break you or make
you bitter. You've got to be cognizant and aware of it. Kennedy thinks not just what he's going to do, but he's conscious
enough to think what is Khrushchev going to do, what is Khrushchev trying to do with
this. And in fact, Khrushchev's real fatal calculation is that he doesn't have a good
read on Kennedy. He'd sort of bullied Kennedy at a conference, had seen Kennedy bungled
a Bay of Pigs. He thought he knew Kennedy, and he thought he knew America, but he didn't.
He couldn't conceive of how America would react to these missiles right on that island.
And Kennedy, though, realizes, especially when his military advisors are telling him,
you got a bomb, Cuba, you got a bomb, the shit out of Cuba, is going to be, you know,
we got to go into a void world for three.
Kennedy knows that to do that, he thinks about cruise chef,
how they're in the same position.
They're both leading these sort of loose coalitions
and with divergent interests and our human beings,
but also heads of state.
He's really able to think
about Christchew's position.
And he says, look, I'm not worried even about
what Christchew's gonna do in response to what I'm gonna do.
I'm worried about like step six or seven
in this chain of escalation.
And so we think about things from people's perspective,
not just because empathy is good,
not just because justice is important,
but strategically it's essential, right?
I talked to, when I was in public relations,
you would see people get so consumed
with the truth of what they had to say
or their own experience or their own point of view,
they couldn't conceive that the reporter
has their own interests,
that the public has their own interests in position.
You have to effectively navigate the world to be successful. You've got to understand
other people's perspective. You've got to think about what's going on with them. And this
allows you to not only be more patient, more forgiving and more gracious as Marcus says,
but it also allows you to be more effective and successful at whatever it is that you are doing.
So I urge you today to spend some time practicing
what's called strategic empathy.
It will make you better,
but most importantly, as we saw in the Kennedy
and Cuban Missile Crisis example,
it may well save the world.
It makes the world a better place
if we are more empathetic with each other.
As Senka said, we're all wicked people in a wicked world.
If we can understand this,
we can be kind and patient and tolerant and understanding. We will all get more of what we want and need.
Thanks so much for listening to the Daily Stoke podcast. If you don't know this, you can get these
delivered to you via email every day. Check it out at dailystoke.com slash email.
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What does our obsession with these feuds say about us?
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