The Daily Stoic - The One Thing All Humans Have In Common | What’s Up To Us, What’s Not Up To Us
Episode Date: January 1, 2024It’s January 1st. It snuck up on you, didn’t it? You knew the year was wrapping up, you had resolutions you meant to make, a review you meant to do of the last twelve months, goals you in...tended to set, habits you were going to start in 2024…and then here it is already.Or worse than procrastination, you may have already relapsed on your resolutions. You had a late one last night, and you’re already saying to yourself this morning, what’s one cup of coffee or one cigarette? (even though you were quitting). Does getting up early really matter that much?, you’re asking yourself. Do I have to workout every day? So you give yourself a mulligan and say that actually tomorrow is the real first day of the year.This is what we humans have been doing and saying for thousands of years. Twenty centuries ago, Seneca said that it’s the one thing fools all have in common: they are always getting ready to start. We see this every year. It’s pretty funny actually. Starting in early December, we start talking about the Daily Stoic New Year New You Challenge.--In this first Daily Stoic Journal entry of the new year, Ryan revisits the most important Stoic task that there is: distinguishing between what is in our control and what isn't.✉️ 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 Stoic's 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.
The one thing we all have in common, it's January 1st today, maybe it's not up on you,
it did sneak up on you, didn't it?
You knew the year was wrapping up.
You had resolutions you meant to make a review you meant to do of the last 12 months goals you intended to set habits
You were going to start in 2024
And then here it is already or worse than procrastination. You may have already
Reelapsed on your resolutions
You had a late one last night and you're already saying to yourself this morning
What's one cup of coffee or one cigarette?
You know, you were quitting.
Just getting up early even really matter that much.
You're asking yourself, do I have to work out every day?
And so you give yourself a mole again and you say that actually tomorrow is the first real day of the year.
This is what human beings have been doing and saying for thousands of
years. 20 centuries ago, Senaika said that it's the one thing that all fools haven't
come. They're always getting ready to start. We, I see this every year, pretty funny actually,
starting in early December, we start talking about the Daily Stoke New Year new challenge.
And you're probably already tired of hearing about it. I'm sorry about that. But you know
what day gets close to the most signups?
It's January 1st after it's already started.
Daily Stoics customer service spends like the first three or four days of the year just
filtering through emails from people saying something like, I know I'm late, but I'd love
to do it.
Can you still let me in?
And it's also funny to watch how the challenge goes.
Among the people who do sign up later, otherwise, I can watch how quickly many of them drop out or drop off. No matter the changes that we make or the
incentives we set up to keep going, it's just how humans operate. We make commitments,
we set goals, we start things, and then our willpower collapses. We make mistakes, we miss
stuff, and then we have trouble getting back on track. And this too is something that
stoicism helps with. As Mark Surrealist reminds himself in meditations, the key is how quickly you can repair, pick up the pieces.
When jarred unavoidably by circumstances, he writes,
revert at once to yourself and don't lose the rhythm anymore that you can help. You'll have a
better grasp of the harmony if you keep going back to it. Well, the thing about rhythm is that
it doesn't get lost. Only we can. The beat goes on. The right path stays open. We just have to come back to it. We have to pick it up again.
Doesn't matter how badly we've messed up, how much we've stumbled, it's still there. It's open for us.
It's not exactly waiting for us, but it continues on ready for us whenever we choose to join or re-join.
And look, if you felt like I was talking to you in today's episode,
if you've been procrastinating, if you've already relapsed on some habits,
if you've been thinking about emailing daily,
stoics, customer service, to see if it's not too late, I just talked to Ashley
and she is plenty ready.
You can still join the daily,
stoic, new, new challenge.
We're keeping it open just a little while longer so you can let it in.
You can do the Q&As with me and all the other stuff I'd really love to have you join us. I'm already off to the races on it, but I hope to see you in
there. You can sign up now at dailystilic.com slash challenge. Not, I'm going to do it tomorrow. I'm
going to do it later next year. No, just do it now. Let's do it together. Join me in thousands of
other stillocks trying to kick the year off right. And by right, I mean with challenges, things that push us out of our comfort zone,
forces to do things we wouldn't otherwise do.
Help us set those new habits and stay on that path or stick with the rhythm.
Again, it's not too late.
I'd love to have you join us dailystalk.com slash challenge.
I'll see you in there today and tomorrow, hopefully.
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Hey, it's Ryan.
Welcome to another episode of the Daily St Stoke podcast. I've got my Daily
Stoke journal in front of me. It's actually got the new cover on it, which is pretty awesome.
I'm actually sliding it in here. Let's riff on today's entry. This is the first week in The
Daily Stoke Journal. And it starts with the most important stoke task that there is. What's up to us and what's not up to us?
Epictetus's handbook, The Incaridion,
begins with the most powerful exercise in all of Stoicism,
the distinction between things that are up to us in our control,
and the things that are not up to us.
It is this, the dichotomy of control
that is the first principle in the entire philosophy.
We don't control many of the things we pursue in life,
yet we become angry, sad, hurt, scared, and jealous
when we don't get them.
In fact, these emotions, those reactions
are about the only thing we do control.
If that is the only lesson to journal on
and think about this year, consider it a year
well and philosophically lived. And then Epictez is discourses, which we actually open the daily
stoke with. So I'll riff on that in a second. But he says, look, the chief task in life is simply
this, to identify and separate matters so that I can say clearly to myself which are externals not under my control and which have to do with the choices I actually control.
Where then do I look for good and evil not in uncontrollable externals but within myself
to the choices that are my own?
And then in Inchoridian 1-1, he riffs on what is and isn't in our control.
It says, some things are in our control while others are not.
We control our opinion, our choice, our desire, our versions,
and in a word, everything of our own doing.
We don't control our body, our property, our reputation,
our position, and in a word, everything not in our own doing.
And even more, the things in our control are by nature free,
unhindered and unobstructed while those not in our control are weak and slavish and can be hindered and are not our own.
And then, one, twenty-two, he says, we control our reasons, choice, and all acts that depend
on moral will.
What's not under control are our body and any of its parts, our possessions, our parents,
our siblings, our children, our country, anything with which we might associate.
Look, I think what Epic Teed is saying here is that not just the wisdom and the serenity
prayer, you know, you separate things into the categories and you only focus on what's
up to you, but that a lot of things that we think of as being up to us or not even up to
us, right?
Really at the absolute core of it, what we control are our thoughts,
our emotions, our opinions. We don't control what happens, control how we respond to what
happens, but even then within a constrained amount. And this might seem kind of resigned
or a sad way to start the year, but I don't think it is. I think it's the only way to start the year.
It's certainly the only way I thought we could start
the daily stoic, which I'll read to you
the January 1st entry.
The single most important practice in stoic philosophy
is differentiating between what we can change
and what we can't, what we have influence over
and what do we do not.
A flight is delayed because of whether
no amount of yelling and an
airline representative will end a storm, no amount of wishing will make you taller or shorter
or born in a different country, no matter how hard you try, you can't make someone like you.
And on top of that, time spent hurling yourself at these immovable objects is time not spent on
the things we can change. The recovery community practices something called the serenity prayer. God grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, the courage
to change the things I can, and the wisdom to know the difference.
Attics cannot change the abuse, suffered, and childhood. They cannot undo the choices
that they have made or the hurt they have caused, but they can change the future through
the power they have in the present moment. As Epictita says, they can control the choices they make right now.
The same is true for us today for the year that stands before us. If we focus on making
clear what parts of our day are within our control and what parts are not, we will not
only be happier, we will have a distinct advantage over other people who fail to realize they are fighting an unwinnable battle.
It's funny.
I think when we're younger, we have an outsized view of what's in our control and what isn't.
And as we get older, we ratchet that back, which is ironic because as we get older, we're
also more powerful, more successful, et cetera.
But you just realize, like, look,
you don't control what other people do.
I mean, even the longer I've been a parent,
the, it's not the less strict I am,
but I do feel a more chill I am
because I've made the mistakes.
I've tried to control things I don't control.
I've seen where my anxiety or stress
or worry or whatever gets me
and I cultivate the ability to step back to
focus on what I control.
My son was like, I was working, I was playing on the fourth and one of my sons and my other
son drew on my jacket with a pen a couple days ago and it's like my favorite jacket.
It's like room and you wrote all over with a red sharpie.
I don't know why I didn't notice, but I didn't.
And it was mad, but I was like, hey, look, no amount of being mad at a child is going to
undo the ruin to jacket.
And what's the opportunity that I want to seize here?
What good is it to make this person feel bad about what happened or to no amount of yelling is going to undo what happened.
So I want to take the opportunity to talk about, instead, calmly, respectfully talk about
what it means to respect other people's persons, their stuff, etc. And to talk about, hey,
I would you feel if I did that to something that you like or that
you care about, right?
And I didn't do it perfectly, but my wife and I were talking about it after just like
how compared to how our parents would have reacted had different it was.
But the idea is, look, I just control what I do about it.
Just control how I respond.
Just control whether I let my emotions get the best of me
or not, or when I catch myself at what point in that process?
And do I walk it back, right?
What's up to us and what's not up to us?
I feel like so many of things that I'm upset about that I'm going to arguments about what
I'm really saying is I wish that hadn't happened.
I want to undo that that happened. And that's not how life works.
That's not something that's up to me.
And so I'm practicing the idea of getting a little bit better
and letting go of that thing, of moving on from that thing.
And so must you.
This is a year that we try to focus more
on what's in our control.
We argue less with reality.
I have a whole set of no cards to theme.
I often journal and think about how often I find us,
we're in arguments with reality.
We wish things were different.
They weren't the way that they were.
And this isn't like resigning yourself
to the state of society.
This is resigning yourself that something that did happen,
happened arguing and relitigating and relitigating, it doesn't change it. society. This is resigning yourself that something that did happen happened. Arguing and
relitigating and relitigating, it doesn't change it. You don't have the power to make it
unhappened. But you do have the power to decide how it's going to make you feel, whether
it harms you or not, what you do about it, who you are because of it. That's the part
of this that's up to us. That's where I'll leave you today. It's a wonderful new year.
Like I was saying, I've got the leather cover on the journal which you can check out at
store.dailystoke.com. It's really cool. I'm glad to have one. This is the copy I keep at the
office I have one at home. And on the front it just says make time, which is what we should be doing
for journaling. We should make time to think about what's in our control. What isn't you can check
that out at store.dailystore.com.
Happy New Year, everyone. Hope you're enjoying the challenge and we'll talk soon.
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