The Daily Stoic - This is How You Make Hard Situations Easier | The Stoic Guide To Freedom And Power (From Epictetus)
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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.
This is how you make hard situations easier.
Airports are stressful and traveling can be a nightmare.
Dealing with a toddler's tantrum at the grocery store tries the best of us. The
confrontation with an employee or a colleague, the phone call where we get
the news that somebody passed away. Life is full of these situations. They
challenge us, they overwhelm us, there is no foolproof way to prevent them or
manage them, but there is something that helps.
Seneca talked about premeditation and alarm.
He said that we had to meditate on all the things
that could happen to us and that by thinking in advance,
let's say about a nightmare travel day
or the eventual death of a grandparent,
we'd lessen it, if only slightly.
The unexpected blow, he said, lands heaviest.
Even just saying that to yourself,
that the airport is stressful, there may be delays, but I've dealt with that before and it's
important for me to try to relax and take things as they come. This doesn't seem like
much, but it helps. Dr. Becky Kennedy, whose book Good Inside we've been raving about,
calls this emotional vaccination. In the same way that a vaccine exposes our body to a manageable
amount of the virus or
the disease, teaching it how to fight the illness, talking to ourselves or our children
about what's going to happen in advance of it happening helps us deal with it.
It removes the surprise.
It removes the suddenness of it.
The last thing you want to do is face anything, a virus or a trip to the grocery store with
a tired kid.
You don't want to face that defenseless,
especially when there are defenses available,
when medicine or the ancient Stoics have studied it
and come up with things that work,
because we are going to catch these situations.
We are going to be exposed to germs,
but if we strengthen ourselves in advance, we can handle it.
All the Stoics talk about freedom. Epictetus would have known what it really meant and more importantly,
he knew how to find it inside literal slavery.
He said a podium in a prison or each a place and each one of those places
we have a certain amount of freedom of will. I'm Ryan Holliday.
I've written a number of books about stoic philosophy,
spoken about it to everyone from the NBA to the NFL, sitting senators and special forces leaders. And I want to give you some
strategies for finding freedom wherever you live, whatever you do, whatever kind
of life you have, from the one and only Epictetus.
You have two options. You can want things to turn out a certain way or you could
welcome them the way they happen, Epictetus says.
He says, you could want them to turn out
as you want them to,
or you could decide that you want them to turn out
how they've turned out.
For the Stoics, this is the discipline of ascent.
Are you gonna wish things are a certain way,
or are you gonna accept them as they are?
That doesn't mean you accept the injustices
of the world, per se,
but it means if it's raining,
you're happy that it's raining.
If it's cloudy, you're happy that it's cloudy. If it's sunny and hot, you're happy that it's sunny
and hot. If you're born short, you're happy that you're short. If you're tall, you're happy that
you're born tall. You accept things as they are. You make the most of it. This is what the idea of
a more hahti is. Accept things, be happy that things are the way that they are, that you were
given what you've been given,
and then get to work using it.
That's what stoicism is about.
So my favorite thing about Epictetus is he's born a slave
and he finds himself a slave in the court of Nero.
So here you have this guy, he has no power, no freedom,
amidst incredible wealth, power, and opulence.
But he comes to realize,
watching how people act in Nero's court,
that these supposedly free people
aren't nearly as free as he thinks.
He watches a man suck up to Nero's cobbler.
He's brown-nosing the guy who makes Nero's shoes
because he wants to get in Nero's favor.
One man comes to Nero and says,
"'I'm down to my last million dollars.
And then Nero says, oh my god, how can you bear it?
Epictetus realizes, although he's
been deprived of his physical freedom,
he's actually less of a slave than all of these people
who are a slave to their ambition,
slave to power, slave to keeping up,
slave to impressing other people,
a slave to appearances, a slave to urges or mistresses.
And so Epictetus realizes that freedom comes from the inside.
Yes, people can bind us up in chains, he says.
They can't remove our power of choice.
They can't change our ability to make our decisions,
to set our own priorities.
That's what Stoicism is actually about.
And that's why the philosophy is popular,
not just with Epictetus, a slave,
but Marcus Aurelius, who's an emperor later in that same court.
The Stoics were fond of sports metaphors just like we are today.
Epictetus, one of the great Stoics, would say that this is what life is.
He compares them to ballplayers, some version of an athlete.
He says a ballplayer doesn't categorize a throw
as good or bad, they're too busy trying to catch it
and throw it back.
He compares Socrates to being the ultimate athlete
or ball player because that's what Socrates was.
Not only in the course of a discussion
could he ping it back and forth,
that he didn't get offended, he wasn't challenged,
he would always just try to respond,
but that Socrates responds to persecution,
he responds to war, he responds to being doubted,
he responds to all the difficulties of his life,
not in thinking of whether they're good or bad,
but in how he's gonna respond,
how he's going to deal with them.
This is the essence then of Stoicism,
it's a very simple idea, we don't control what happens,
we control how we respond to what happens. We don't control what happens. We control how we respond to what happens.
We don't control other people.
We control how we respond to other people.
You can't trust appearances.
Epictetus says that what studying philosophy gives you, he says, it makes you like a money
changer who can know from the way they bang a coin on the table whether it's counterfeit or not.
Stoicism is about putting every impression to the test.
And as you try to make money in life, as you try to invest in life, it's not just finding
the good investments, finding the good vehicles, it's about avoiding being scammed.
It's about avoiding fads.
It's about avoiding false promises.
Mark Cerullo says you can't fall for every smooth talker.
That's what Epictetus is saying. You put the impression to the test.
You can trust, but you have to verify. If it seems too good to be true, whether it's an emotion or an investment,
it probably is.
investment, it probably is.
Epictetus says that when you look outside yourself for approval, you have settled, you've handed over your
happiness for your autonomy. And this is such a critical
stoic idea when we talk about what's in our control, what's
not in our control, how you should judge yourself, whether
you're getting better, whether you're a success, whether you're
rich, whether you're whatever it is whether you're rich, whatever it is,
it can't be determined by other people.
What you've done is hand over your life
on a platter to other people.
Obviously this is wonderful when people are celebrating you
and saying you're awesome, but what happens when that turns?
What happens if the crowd is wrong?
What happens if the times that you're in
are valuing the wrong things?
So Epictetus is saying that you wanna look inward,
you wanna create your own standards, your own scorecard for what's important to
you. So a Stoic doesn't look to outside sources, outside people, outside
benchmarks for their success, for their happiness, for the self-worth. You find
that internally.
A cold plunge is something you do physically, but it's really about a mindset shift.
It's about embracing discomfort.
It's about getting comfortable with adversity.
It's about pushing your boundaries.
It's about challenging yourself.
It's about being present in the moment.
In meditations, Marcus Aurelius talks about washing off the dust of earthly life.
We know the Romans had bath houses.
They had cold plunges. They would alternate between the dust of earthly life. We know the Romans had bath houses, they had cold plunges,
they would alternate between the hot and the cold
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One of my favorite lessons from Epictetus,
he says, it's impossible to learn that
which you think you already know.
Whenever I'm around people that are much better
than me at something,
when I'm embarrassingly bad at something,
I have no fear or shame about asking
really stupid questions.
If I'm remotely unsure about something, I'll ask.
I don't care if I look stupid,
which is actually another really important lesson
from Epictetus.
He says, if you want to improve, you have to be content.
You have to be okay with looking stupid or foolish.
You have to be willing to be embarrassed or to be awkward
or be uncomfortable with something,
or you can't get any better.
I'm not afraid to ask questions.
I'm not afraid to look like an idiot.
I'd rather look like an idiot than chop off my hand
or have something fall on me or screw it up.
So that's how I think about it. I'm not afraid to ask dumb questions.
Epictetus sees power up close and he learns something very important. He learns that most
powerful people are not free at all. He says because to be free you have to be in control
of yourself. He says no man is free who is not master of himself. So even though Epictetus is a slave and his life is so
circumscribed compared to the rich powerful people he's owned by who he
sees every day in the palace, he knows he's actually freer, that he has a better
life because he controls his urges, his desires, his thoughts, he directs his mind,
he knows what he wants, he knows what's important.
And if you don't know those things,
it doesn't matter how rich you are,
it doesn't matter how famous you are,
it doesn't matter what you have,
how big your platform is, how important your job is,
you are not free.
You become free when you master yourself
and you master your mind,
then you master your life and you master the world.
When life deals you a problem, you can complain.
When you're facing a challenge, you can resent it.
Or you can look at it as Epictetus did.
You can say to yourself, life has paired me with a strong sparring partner and I'm going
to be better for wrestling with it, for fighting it, for beating it.
And look, Epictetus isn't talking about this theoretically.
He spends 30 years in Roman slavery, but he chooses to see the adversity, big and small,
in his life as a challenge.
So instead of being dealt an unfair advantage, he's stepping up and taking advantage of the
opportunity to grow by struggling with this resistance, by wrestling with it, by sparring
with it, by wrestling with it, by sparring with it,
by learning from it.
And this is how we can face the adversity in our own lives.
Instead of feeling like we're unlucky,
instead of feeling like we've been screwed over,
we say life dealt me something
and I'm gonna be better for sparring with it.
Epictetus says every situation has two handles.
One will bear weight, the other won't. So
what are you going to grab this by? How are you going to choose to see it? How are you
going to choose to try to carry it? It's the same thing, a different perspective. Life
is like that. We can look at it one way or we can choose to look at it another way. We
can choose to look at something as an obstacle or we can choose to look at something as an
opportunity. We can see chaos if we look close. We can see order if at something as an obstacle, or we can choose to look at something as an opportunity.
We can see chaos if we look close.
We can see order if we look from afar.
We can see disadvantage if we look at it one way.
We can see advantage if we look the other.
We can see obstacle from this perspective,
opportunity from the other.
Well, actually Epictetus talks about this.
He says, you know, someone's working out, lifting weights.
You don't say, show me your muscles.
You say, show me what you can lift.
As far as your insights go or your breakthroughs go or your disparities go or the philosophy
you studied goes, that's great.
But what matters is what you can do in the present moment.
What matters is what you can do in moments big and small in your actual life.
I would add though that people shouldn't expect that these ordinary contractions into negative
states of mind won't keep occurring.
The crucial difference between freedom and bondage is how quickly you can wake up from
them and whether you can really wake up from it.
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Back in the plumber days?
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