The Daily Stoic - They’re Difficult But They Can Make You Better | Protecting Our Inner Fortress From Fear
Episode Date: September 13, 2024Just like the great philosophers (and patient siblings and children and parents) throughout history, we can find wisdom in our difficult relationships. They bring both obstacles and opportuni...ties, challenging us to grow and refine our character.🎙️ Listen to Ryan’s live answer in Melbourne on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, & Wondery🎟 Ryan Holiday is going on tour! Grab tickets for London, Rotterdam, Dublin, Vancouver, and Toronto at ryanholiday.net/tour📓 Grab your own leather bound signed edition of The Daily Stoic! Check it out at the Daily Stoic Store: https://store.dailystoic.com/✉️ Want Stoic wisdom delivered to your inbox daily? Sign up for the FREE Daily Stoic email at https://dailystoic.com/dailyemail🏛 Get Stoic inspired books, medallions, and prints to remember these lessons at the Daily Stoic Store: https://store.dailystoic.com/📱 Follow 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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We've got a bit of a commute now with the kids and their new school.
And so one of the things we've been doing as a family is listening to audiobooks in the car.
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And listening to Audible helps you do precisely that.
Whether you listen to short stories,
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really any genre that you love,
maybe you're into stoicism.
And there's some books there that I might recommend
by this one guy named Ryan.
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Welcome to the Daily Stoic Podcast. On Friday, we do
double duty, not just reading our daily meditation,
but also reading a passage from the Daily Stoic,
my book, 366 Meditations on Wisdom,
Perseverance in the Art of Living,
which I wrote with my wonderful collaborator, translator,
and literary agent, Stephen Hanselman.
So today, we'll give you a quick meditation from the Stoics
with some analysis from me, and then we'll give you a quick meditation from the Stoics with some analysis from me,
and then we'll send you out into the world to turn these words into works.
They're difficult, but they can make you better.
We all come from different backgrounds.
Some of us grew up with two parents
while others had just one.
Maybe you had a big extended family with lots of relatives
or perhaps you were an only child.
Whatever the case, you didn't get to choose
the family we were born into.
We had no control over whether they were loving,
whether they understood us or whether anyone in our family
shared our interests or values.
But I was thinking about this recently
about what we can control when it comes to family.
When I was giving my talk in Melbourne
on part of this tour I'm doing,
and by the way, I'll be in Europe and Canada in November.
I'd love to see you and grab tickets at ryanholiday.net.
I'm gonna do some Q&As.
And in the part of this Q and A,
someone who said they love their family and friends,
but finds it hard to fit in with them
because of different beliefs and goals.
My answer, and if you listen
to the Daily Stoke podcast on Thursdays,
you know I do some Q and A's there sometimes from my talks.
I wanted to touch on a passage from Epictetus
where he talks about precisely this.
He says, every event has two handles,
one by which it can be carried and one by which it can't.
If your brother does you wrong, he says,
don't grab it by his wronging
because this handle is incapable of lifting it.
Instead, use the other, that he is your brother,
that you were raised together,
and then you will have hold of the handle that carries.
In the struggle to fit in with family members
with different values and beliefs,
it's easy to focus on the differences,
which naturally leads to feelings of frustration,
alienation, even resentment.
But as Epictetus reminds us,
we can choose to focus on what brings us together,
the shared memories, the family ties,
the connection that remains
even when our paths have diverged.
In this way, rather than a source of tension,
time with our family becomes a source of training,
an opportunity to practice our philosophy.
It was said that Socrates viewed his difficult marriage
as a challenge that life presented to him,
a test of patience and character,
believing that the disagreements
or the differing views on life
ultimately made him a better person.
In book one of Meditations, Marcus Aurelius
thanks the gods for blessing him with a stepbrother,
very different from his own, one that he says,
who had a character that challenged me to improve my own.
And Marcus Aurelius didn't just tolerate Lucius Verus,
he found a way to work with him, even naming him co-emperor.
Similarly, Confucius came to value as difficult friends
and family members as his teachers.
Identifying their strengths, he said, I follow them.
And identifying their weaknesses, I reform myself.
Just like the great philosophers throughout history,
we can find wisdom in our difficult relationships. They bring both obstacles and opportunities, challenging us to grow and refine
our character. What matters is how we respond to these challenges and who we become in the process.
No one ever said that relationships, let alone family, is supposed to be easy. They never have
been and they never will be, not even for the wisest among us.
But in the end, they are worth the effort.
And anyways, if you wanna come see me live,
it was actually cool,
a bunch of people came with their families.
I brought my family out to Sydney and Melbourne
and we're gonna come together to the talks in London
and Dublin and Rotterdam.
I think I'm gonna go solo to Toronto and Vancouver.
But anyways, I would love to see you all.
I'd love to hear your questions.
And these are the kinds of things that inspire me
because in talking about answering your questions,
it gives me things to talk about here
in the Daily Stoke email and in the Daily Stoke podcast.
So that was really cool.
Grab tickets, ryanholiday.net slash tour
and tune into the Thursday episodes.
If you don't, I guess that was yesterday.
So you can go backwards or wait till next Thursday, but I always run cool Q and A's. I episodes if you don't. I guess that was yesterday, so you can go backwards
or wait till next Thursday, but I always run cool Q&As.
I grab them from my talks.
I grab them from stuff we do as part
of the Daily Stoke challenges.
I grab them from all over the place,
but I think you'll really like it.
So anyways, I hope to see you at the dates
and thanks to the lovely person who asked this question
for inspiring this email.
Thanks to the lovely person who asked this question for inspiring this email.
Protecting our inner fortress from fear.
This is the September 13th entry in the Daily Stoic
366 Meditations on Wisdom, Perseverance,
and the Art of Living.
And we have a quote today from Epictetus's discourses 4.1.
No, it is events that give rise to fear
when another has power over them or can prevent them.
That person becomes able to inspire fear.
How is the fortress destroyed?
Not by iron or fire, but by judgments.
Here is where we must begin.
It is from this front that we must seize the fortress
and throw out the tyrants.
The Stoics give us a marvelous concept, the inner citadel.
It is this fortress they believe that protects the soul.
Though we might be physically vulnerable,
though we might be at the mercy of fate in many ways,
our inner domain is impenetrable.
As Marcus Aurelius put it repeatedly, in fact,
stuff cannot touch the soul. But history teaches us that impenetrable fortresses can still be
breached if betrayed from the inside. The citizens inside the walls, if they fall prey
to fear or greed or avarice, can open the gates and let the enemies in.
This is what so many of us do when we lose our nerve
or give in to fear.
You've been granted a strong fortress.
Don't betray it."
You know, actually I was thinking as I was grabbing this,
I wanted to think of another entry,
actually just a couple of days earlier.
This is the September 9th entry in the Daily Stoic.
Seneca in Moral Letter says,
"'But there is no reason to live
and no limit to our miseries
if we let our fears predominate.
And I tell a story from American history.
I say, in the early days of what would become known
as the Great Depression, a new president
named Franklin Delano Roosevelt was sworn in
and gave his first inaugural address.
As the last president to hold office
before the 20th Amendment was ratified, FDR wasn't
able to take office until March, meaning that the country had been without strong leadership
for months.
Panic was in the air, banks were failing, and people were scared.
You've probably heard the nothing-to-fear-but-fear-itself soundbite that FDR gave in that famous speech.
But the full line is worth reading because it applies to so many difficult things we face in life.
which paralyzes needed efforts to convert retreat into advance. The Stoics knew that fear was to be feared because of the miseries it creates.
The things we fear pale in comparison to the damage we do to ourselves and others when
we unthinkingly scramble to avoid them.
An economic depression is bad.
A panic is worse. A tough situation isn't helped by terror. It only makes
things harder. And that's why we must resist and reject it. If we
wish to turn this situation around. But the the Stokes know
of course, we're going to be scared sometimes. There's a line
I have in in Courageous Calling, I'm quoting Faulkner. And I
love the distinction.
He says, it's okay to feel fear, just don't be afraid.
If we think about, there's a difference between
that reaction, that initial anxiety, worry, startle,
whatever, and then what we allow ourselves to give into,
what we allow ourselves to be carried away by
when we lose control of ourselves.
And that's what FDR was talking about.
He wasn't saying, hey, the future is rosy
and bright and awesome.
He's saying, hey, if you guys make a run on the banks,
hey, if you guys turn on each other,
if we turn on each other,
if we give up believing in each other
and in the system and our ability to do something about it,
this whole thing's gonna fall apart, right?
And I think we're in a similar moment now.
I mean, people are afraid, people are worried about things
on both sides of the spectrum.
And ironically, it's fear that's motivating
some of the people that do the very extreme and dangerous
and actually really scary things
that they're talking about doing.
And then, you know, it creates this wicked feedback loop.
And so calming down, zooming out, seeing the big picture,
drawing on your courage, your bravery, your confidence,
that inner citadel that says,
hey, I've been through stuff like this before.
We've been through stuff like this before.
I don't know what's gonna happen out there.
I don't know what these other people are gonna do,
but I know what I have to do.
I know who I'm supposed to be.
I know what's important.
I know what my values are, right?
I'm gonna calm down.
I'm not gonna contribute to the panic.
I'm not gonna make things worse.
I'm not gonna turn on other people.
I'm gonna do what I have to do.
That's today's message.
Be well, be safe. Be brave everyone
Thanks so much for listening to the daily stoke podcast
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