The Daily Stoic - They’re Throwing This To You | Try The Other Handle
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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 happen to be doing.
So let's get into it.
They're throwing this torch to you. The ancient world was not perfect.
There was corruption, there was political gridlock, there was violence,
there was stupidity and apathy and indifference.
Some people accepted this.
Actually, a lot of people did.
You might think that the Stoics,
given all they say about assenting
to what's not in our control,
would be among those who simply tolerated the status quo.
But this is not true.
The Stoics were active in politics.
They were active in public life.
There were such constant thorns in the side of some of the worst emperors that they became
known as the Stoic opposition.
There were Stoics who fought against corruption.
There were Stoics who stood for the little guy.
There were Stoics who strove to make the world better.
Seneca said that while we didn't have the power to choose our parents, we did have the
power to choose whose children we would like to be.
We can look at history and see all the evil and awfulness,
or we can decide to be the descendants of those trailblazers,
groundbreakers, activists, heroes, and helpers
who help move things forward.
This is one of the ideas in the new book,
Right Thing Right Now.
We're not literally related to Cato,
but he started something that we can finish.
That's what George Washington and Thomas Jefferson thought anyway.
Neither of those two men were perfect, but they were trying to live up to Cato's example.
And we can bring their vision closer to reality, realize the words that they wrote more than their
deeds. That's how Marcus Aurelius saw the Stoics who came before him, writing that Thrasya and Helvidius and Cato and Brutus helped conceive of a society of equal laws governed by equality
of status and speech, and of rulers who respect the liberty of their subjects above all else.
They didn't get there fully, and neither did he, and neither will we.
But we have to try.
There is a famous World War I poem about how one generation sacrifices
for another, hopes that they can carry the work onwards. To you from failing hands we throw,
it reads the torch, be it yours to hold it high. That's what life and history are about. That's
what we have to be working on. The Stoics bequeath to us a powerful tradition of trying, of striving to do
what's right, of being willing to sacrifice, in some cases sacrifice
everything to keep that torch alight. Will you prove to be a worthy recipient?
Will you hold it high? Will you move things forward before passing the torch
to the next generation? the world needs you too.
Anyways, that's the idea.
Right thing, right now, good values, good character,
good deeds comes out on June 11th.
It's basically here, people, if you haven't pre-ordered
and you don't wanna kill me
for having talked about it so much,
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We have a bunch of awesome bonuses.
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If you already bought the book,
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That would mean a lot too.
Without further ado,
I'll leave you to the rest of today's episode.
["The Other Handle"]
Try the other handle. Epictetus offered a powerful tool in his handbook, the Inchoridion, which the Stoics use as an exercise in decision-making about difficult events. Everything, Epictetus
says, has two interpretations, or handles, by which it can be grabbed. One that will
make it harder, one that will make it easier.
Do you take offense or do you focus on a common ground?
Do you focus on all that's gone wrong or what has gone right?
Ask yourself these questions about everything you see and feel.
Try to always grab the right handle.
That's from this week's entry in the Daily Stoic Journal,
366 days of writing and reflection on the art of living, which you can get anywhere books are sold, including, of course, my bookstore, The Painted Porch, which you can check out thepaintedporch.com or come see us on Main Street in Bastrop, Texas.
Let's listen to Epictetus drill down on this.
has two handles, he says, one by which it can be carried and one by which it can't. If your brother does you wrong, don't grab it by its wrongdoing,
because this is the handle incapable of lifting it.
Instead, use the other, that he is your brother, that you were raised together,
and then you off hold of the handle that it carries.
This is Epictetus in Coridian 43, and then he says in Discourses 41,
no, it is events that give rise to fear
when another has power over them or can prevent it,
that a person becomes able to inspire fear.
How is the fortress destroyed?
Not by iron or fire, but by judgments.
And it is here that we must begin.
And it is from this front that we must seize the fortress
and throw out the tyrants.
So this idea of grabbing things by the handle,
in fact, there's this interesting list,
you can Google it, Thomas Jefferson wrote a bunch of rules
for one of his young relatives.
And he says, somewhat elusively, he says,
always grab things by their smooth handle.
I think it was Donald Robertson who pointed out to me
that he's referring to Epictetus,
grabbing by the right handle.
Instead of the rough handle, grab the smooth handle.
The point being, stuff happens. Are you going to try to say, this was done to me, or are you going
to say, this is done for me? Are you going to say, look at all I've lost, or are you
going to say, look at all I've gained? As Epictetus says, you're going to say, look
at my brother, what did he do? What an asshole. Are you going to say, this is my brother?
I love him. He would never hurt me on purpose. You grab the handle that makes you stronger, the one that
gives you agency, not the one that strips you of agency. You grab the one that gives you hope,
not the one that strips you of hope. You grab the one that gives you a path forward, not the one
that freezes you hopelessly in place. What's the right handle? That's what we're thinking about,
and every situation has a handle. And are you going to get mad? Are you going to use it as an
opportunity?
I think about this with my kids.
They do something.
Am I gonna lose my temper and show them
that I lose my temper and that they should be afraid of me
or that they should hide things from me?
Or am I gonna use it as a chance to talk to them
to teach them something?
Famously, story of George Washington
and the cherry trees teaching this lesson.
His father catches him chopping down the cherry tree.
He asks who does it. George Washington tells the truth. His father could be angry. He just has a confession from his son that he chopped down a priceless cherry tree.
Instead, the moral of the story is, I'm glad that you told me the truth.
And you can trust me.
I'm not going to punish you for having told me the truth.
I'd rather you chop down my trees than tell a lie.
Right?
What handle are you going to choose as a parent, as a teacher, as a boss?
By grabbing the right handle versus the wrong handle, you're going to my trees than tell a lie. Right? What handle are you going to choose as a
parent, as a teacher, as a boss? By grabbing the right handle versus the wrong handle, are you
making the relationship stronger, better, based on trust, based on aligned incentives, based on
shared history? Or by grabbing the wrong handle, are you showing them to lie? Are you showing them
to hide things? Are you showing them that you should be feared, that you should be ignored,
that you can't be taken seriously, that you're not really their ally or friend?
Right. The handle we choose matters.
Even Epictetus, you've got to imagine he's trapped in slavery.
It's horrible. He spends the first 30 years of his life that way.
Does he choose to see this as the worst thing that could have possibly happened?
Or does he learn from it?
Even the so-called Stockdale paradox and he says I knew I would survive
And if I did I would turn this into the very best thing that happened to me
That's choosing to grab the right handle that's choosing to grab the smooth handle
Which is what you must do, which is what we must all do in any and all situations and that's it for me today
I'm exhausted. I've just spent all day recording videos
You hear my voice going out a little bit, but I'm trying to tell myself
This is one day among many
Is making me stronger. I'm getting better for it. I'm crossing off stuff my list
So I can focus on what I really need to be doing. I'm gonna try to grab the good handle today. So should you. Talk soon.
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