The Daily Stoic - This is All It’s Good For | 3 Stoic Mantras To Build Your Life On
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Welcome to the Daily Stoic Podcast, where each day we read a passage of ancient wisdom designed to help you in your everyday life.
On Tuesdays, we take a closer look at these stoic ideas, how we can apply them in our actual lives.
Thanks for listening, and I hope you enjoy.
Hi, I'm David Brown, the host of Wunderree's podcast business wars.
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Each of us strives for accomplishment, for recognition. This is what human beings do.
We want to be the best.
We want to be celebrated.
We want to hear the applause of the crowd.
We want to establish a legacy.
This is why we work hard, why we strive, why we push ourselves.
In markets, it really is time.
It's why generals took armies out to distant lands
to win great victories and earn themselves a triumph
through the streets of Rome.
Today, it's why we not only do our own version of this
with events like Super Bowl Parades or CEOs
ringing the opening belt, the stock market,
but why we hire publicists to spread the word about it.
But where does this recognition and attention get us?
And what does it mean?
Brad Pitt, one of the most famous and beloved actors
of his generation, once told a story
about the early days of his career.
He just got in his first bit of
real publicity, a positive profile in a major newspaper.
I was pretty pleased with himself.
He recounted recently.
Two days after it came out, I go over to a friend of a friend's house.
In the kitchen I looked down and there's a litter box for a cat, and there's my piece
in USA Today with a cat turd on top of it.
That pretty much defines it.
In Meditations, Marcus Aurelius tries to remind himself
what applause really is just a bunch of idiots
slapping their hands together.
What is cheering in praise?
He says just the clacking of tongues.
And what happened to Alexander the great,
the most famous and accomplished man in the world?
In the end, he was buried in the same ground
as an ordinary, mule driver.
The point of this exercise is not to render everything and every honor meaningless.
It's just a reminder.
Don't get too full of yourself.
Don't think that fame or awards change anything.
Don't let power go to your head, tune it out.
Focus on what you control, keep doing your best.
If people appreciate that, great.
If they don't, well know what their opinions
and recognition are actually worth. As you know, we talked about recently the power of stories.
Titer than a story, I think, is a mantra, maximum, an epigram, a one-liner,
a one-word, March's Relic and Meditation talks about epithets for the self. Watch
words for life. Mantras, reminders, like a thing, a slogan, a motto that you can
repeat yourself in difficult moments. I was just interviewing the great Robert Corham for the podcast and he was
talking about, but day, one of the prisoners in the Hanoi Hilton the Long side stocked out and
he's going in to be tortured. How am I not going to break under this and he finds himself repeating
an Air Force motto, return with honor, right? Those kind of core mantras are just so powerful.
They're so easy to remember.
They're hard to do.
They're simple, but they're not easy.
But in today's episode, I want to give you some reminders.
Two, you've probably heard a million times
on this podcast, Momenta Mori, another one,
Amor Fati.
The other one, good character and good deeds.
Point is, these are some mantras we can build on, build our life around
that I'm excited to share with you today.
What I think is one of the best passages in all of meditations,
but certainly the most illustrative, Marcus releases the fruit of this life
is good character and acts for the common good.
I think if we're assorting that to a mantra, we'd say good
character, act for the common good. Or good character, good deeds. Meaning that you work on yourself,
of course, that's a huge part of stoicism, but it's also about what you do for others, whether you're
being a positive difference maker in the world. I think Marx really refers to the common good,
something like 80 times in meditations. And so it's really important
that we don't see stoses as this interior philosophy. It's about perfecting the self,
or working on the self, so one can make a bigger difference in the world. So this mantra of good
character acts for the common good. You work on yourself, but then how are you making a difference
in the world? How are you making things better? how are you contributing, how are you being of service. That's the motto that I think you want to try to live by every
single day, you want to say to yourself in every situation, you want to remind yourself,
look, what's my character and what am I doing for others, right? That to me is the essence
of stoicism and why this is such a critical stoic mantra and one of the three I want
you to think about constant.
I just watched the sun go down here on the beach.
Every time you see the sunset, every time you see the sunrise, you should stop as the
stoics do and remind yourself, you will never see that again.
You'll never see that specific sunrise or specific sunset again, that's part of it.
The other thing is that's one less that you will ever get in your life.
The stoics say, it's not that death is in the future
but that we're dying every minute, every day.
Every time we see the sunset, every time we get a haircut,
every time we watch a few seconds tick on the clock,
you have to remind yourself that it's time
you will never get back.
Time is not just our most precious resource,
but it's tick, tick, ticking away.
It is non-renewable. So the idea of a Memento Mori for the Stokes was that time is
fleeting. It is escaping us. It is killing us as we are killing time. Death is
there in every sunset, every sunrise, no matter how beautiful. Remind yourself
with that little bittersweet fact. So you never take another one or another
minute for granted. To me the most powerful lesson in all of Seneca's writings, she says don't think of death as
something that's happening in the future that eventually will happen to you.
He says think of it as something that's happening right now.
He said we're dying every day, we're dying every minute.
I'm looking here at this cemetery in New Orleans, obviously every single person in it died, right?
At eventually death happened to them.
But Seneca wants us to remember
that death was happening to them always.
All 61 or 80 or 90 or 17 of the years that they were alive,
they died every second, every minute,
and then eventually that stopped happening.
So to me, that's a transformational life changing
mind blowing way to think about life.
Not that death is something in the future that happens once,
but death is something that's happening always and every second, every minute that passes,
every year that passes, now belongs to death. It's as dead as any of the people in the cemetery.
You'll never get it back, which is why you should live it, embrace it, and don't waste it while you
have it. There's something that's so important to me that I carry it with me everywhere I go.
It's a reminder I never wanna be too far from it's something
I always wanna have in the top of my mind.
It's this Memento Mori coin I carry my pocket.
Memento Mori just means remember you are mortal.
Remember that you will die.
Marcus Aurelius says, you can leave life right now.
Let that determine what you do and say and think.
Never forget your mortal, you don't have forever,
you could go at any moment,
whether it's a pandemic or a car crash
or a cancer diagnosis, life is very short,
don't take it for granted,
don't assume you're gonna live forever,
live as if you have limited time
because you do have limited time,
that's what a momentum or a means,
and that's why I carry it with me everywhere I go.
There's a great story about Thomas Edison. He's America's most successful inventor. He's towards the end of his life. He's a millionaire many times over. He's having dinner with his
family and a man rushes and he says, the factory is on fire. You have to come quick.
And Edison gets there and it is. His life's work is up in flames.
There's no chance this fire is going out.
But he finds his son, his son is standing there shell-shocked
and Edison grabs him and he says,
go get your mother and all her friends.
They'll never see a fire like this again.
And I just, I love that story so much
because instead of crying, instead of weeping,
instead of blaming, he's just taking this brief moment
to enjoy the surreal, almost terribleness of his fate.
He's finding something good in it.
Nestoics have this idea of a more faulty,
which Nietzsche perfectly encapsulates when he says,
you don't just bear what is necessary, you love it.
That's what a more faxing means.
It's a love of fate.
And that's what Edison does.
He tells a reporter, look, I've been through stuff
like this before. It prevents a man from being bored. And he throws his life into rebuilding after this.
He takes a loan from Henry Ford and he's back up and running within six weeks and then within six months.
So the idea is, stuff is going to happen and it can break your heart, it can break your spirit, or
you can say, go get your mother and all her friends. We'll never see a fire like this again.
And you can love it and embrace it and turn it into the greatest thing that ever happened to you.
It's good that it's hard because if it wasn't hard if it was easy if there were never any obstacles if everyone got
exactly what they wanted all the time everyone would do it they would do what you are doing
and there'd be a whole lot more competition. When Mark really says no it's not unfortunate that this happened
it's fortunate that it happened to me. This is what he's talking about.
Everyone else would have been knocked over by it.
They would have been deterred by it.
They would have been discouraged by it.
But you are strong enough to deal with this.
And so it's good that it's happened.
It's not bad that it's happened.
It's fortunate that it happened.
And you don't want it to be easy.
It's good that it's hard.
What the Stoics talk about is the idea of loving what happens.
Marcus really says that what you throw on top of a fire
is fuel for the fire.
So what you want to cultivate, what you have to practice,
you have to almost repeat it like a mantra to yourself,
is the practice of loving everything that happens.
So not just accepting it, not just tolerating it,
but leading into it going,
this is for me, I chose this, I wanted this way,
and it's the best fucking thing that ever happens to me.
When the computer eats the manuscript
you've been working on, you say,
a more faulty, I love it.
When you're stuck in traffic, you say,
a more faulty, I love it.
When you're criticized on Twitter,
when your boss calls you out, you say,
a more faulty, I love it,
I'm gonna be better for this having happened to me.
When you're hungry, you say, I love it.
I'm alive.
I feel this.
I'm gonna make the most of it.
You say a morpati.
When you lose someone you love,
it might seem crazy to say a morpati,
but no amount of anger, no amount of resentment,
no amount of sadness brings them back.
So you take what you can from this.
That's what Amor Fati is.
You use it as fuel.
You become better from it.
You become improved by it.
You have cancer.
You're disabled.
You're white.
Or black.
You're short or tall.
You're rich or poor.
Amor Fati, I'm gonna make the most of it.
I'm not gonna let this stop me.
I'm gonna be better for this haven't happened.
When Thomas Edison's factory burned down,
he finds his son, his son is stunned, shell shocked.
That's how most people are when they face obstacles.
But Edison grabbed him and he said,
go get your mother and all her friends,
they'll never see a fire like this again.
That's what Amor Fati is.
I'm gonna use this.
And he rebuilds that factory.
He tells a report to the next day,
this is gonna prevent me from getting bored. This is going to be the next act of my life.
And that's what he did. He rebuilt. He didn't wind. He didn't complain. He didn't point the finger.
He just moved on and he just kept going. And that's what we have to do with every obstacle that we face.
Whatever it is, big or small, fair or unfair. Shows in or tragic. We say, a more botty.
Love it all.
Use it as fuel.
Become better for this having happened.
And that's a formula for human greatness.
It's the only way that we should go through the world,
because it's the only way that turns the bad things in life
into good things. Thanks so much for listening.
If you could rate this podcast and leave a review on iTunes,
that would mean so much to us and it would really help the show.
We appreciate it and I'll see you next episode.
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