The Daily Stoic - This Is What We Use This For | Build Up, Don’t Tear Down
Episode Date: October 23, 2023On the surface, there are not many phrases designed to be less appealing. “Stoic philosophy” is like a double whammy of negative for most people, representing emotionlessness on the one h...and and abstract or academic thinking on the other. Who wants to be the former? Who has time for the latter?---And with today's meditation on the day's Daily Journal excerpt, Ryan challenges us to build self confidence in others. The art of leadership is getting people to do things becauce they want to do them, that a job of a leader is to make people better. Stoicism 101 is a 14-day course dedicated to teaching you the tools to live your best life. To distill down the absolute best lessons of Stoicism and teach you what the philosophy is really about. Again, this will be a live course. Beginning on MONDAY, NOVEMBER 6TH all participants will move through the course together at the same pace.Registration will close on TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 7TH.⏳ You can view our entire Memento Mori Collection at dailystoic.com/mm✉️ 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.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, I'm Hannah.
And I'm Seruti.
And we are the hosts of a Red Handed, a weekly true crime podcast.
Every week on Red Handed, we yet stuck into the most talked about cases.
But we also dig into those you might not have heard of, like the Nephiles Royal Massacre
and the Nithory Child Sacrifices.
Whatever the case, we want to know what pushes people to the extremes of human behaviour.
Find, download, and binge Red Handhanded wherever you listen to your podcasts.
Go SoundReal. At least as a journalist, that's what I've always believed. Sure, odd things
happened in my childhood bedroom, but ultimately, I shrugged it all off. That is, until a couple of
years ago, when I discovered that every subsequent argument of that house is convinced they've experienced something inexplicable too,
including the most recent inhabitant who says she was visited at night by the ghost of a faceless woman.
And it gets even stranger.
It just so happens that the alleged ghost haunted my childhood room might just be my wife's great grandmother.
It was murdered in the house next door by two gunshots to the face. From Wondering and Pineapple Street Studios comes Ghost Story, a podcast about family secrets
overwhelming coincidence and the things that come back to haunt us.
Follow Ghost Story on the Wondering app or wherever you get your podcasts.
You can binge all episodes ad-free right now by joining Wondering Plus.
by joining OneDreetBus.
Welcome to the Daily Stoic Podcast. Each day we bring you a meditation inspired by the ancient Stoic's illustrated
best 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're happy to be doing.
So let's get into it.
This is what we use this for. On the surface, there are not many phrases designed to be less appealing. Stoic philosophy is like a double whammy of negative for most people, representing a motionless
on one hand and abstract or academic thinking on the other. Who wants to be the former and who
has time for the latter.
And this is all rather tragic, considering, you know, not just the actual writings of the Stokes, but their actual lives, which were a direct contradiction of this stereotype.
Of the few stories we have of Marcus Aurelius, three involved him crying.
In addition to the heartfelt letters he wrote as friend,
Seneca's favorite genre to write was known as a consolation,
and no one can pick up his essays on grief
when to his mother, no less,
and think that he was emotionless.
Kato clearly loved his son and daughter,
and was noted for weeping over the loss of his beloved brother
and his passionate objection to tyrants and bullies
his whole life.
The Stelox were far from emotionless.
They were people who loved, who grieved, who cried,
who were scared, who sacrificed, who cared
about their neighbors, who raised children, who bled and died for change, who strove, who
lived.
Nor were they pedantic or impractical.
Many of the Stoics were too busy doing to even bother writing any philosophy and the philosophical
writings we do have from the Stookes are accessible to readers at every level.
In fact, today's academic philosophers tend not to like Stoicism very much for this very
reason.
It's not abstract and theoretical enough.
For almost a decade now, our mission at the Daily Stoke has been fighting against these
centuries-old misperceptions about Stoicism.
We're trying to restore this vibrant and action-oriented
and paradigm-shifting way of living to its rightful place, which is as a tool in the pursuit
of self-mastery and perseverance and wisdom, something one uses to live well and do good.
And that's actually why we made this amazing course called Stoicism 101,
Ancient Philosophy for Your Actual Life. It's the absolute best of stoicism. It's an amazing course called Stoicism 101, ancient philosophy for your actual life.
It's the absolute best of Stoicism.
It's an introduction, it's a survey course,
all delivered in 14 days.
And since the launch Stoicism 101 has become
our most popular course and we're doing it again here
in 2023 with a live cohort,
it's gonna be awesome.
I'm gonna be in there answering your questions
and we're just gonna do a deep dive into all things,
Stoics, all things, Stoicism, and distilled the absolute best
lessons of Stoicism down to their essence
and teach you what the philosophy is really about.
Whether you're new to Stoicism or you've been studying it
for years, learning more is always a good thing.
And in these two weeks of emails,
almost 20,000 words of content, you learn what a Stoic does,
you learn what a Stoic shouldn't do. You learn the a stoic does. You learn what a stoic shouldn't do.
You learn the stoic secret to success,
stoic secrets to resilience,
stoic secrets to productivity,
what sets stoicism apart from other philosophy.
And most importantly, how to live your best life.
There's two live video sessions with me,
what we're calling office hours.
And I'll answer all your stoic questions.
And look, the whole course is less than you would pay,
even to take a fully philosophy course
at a community college, let alone,
let alone a university.
And it's gonna teach you everything
you need to know about stosism,
get you started, point you in the right direction.
And this is a live course,
it's gonna start on Monday, November 6th.
We'll move through the course together.
And registration is now open. I'd love to see you
in there. Don't delay. Don't put it off. You can click the link in today's show notes or just
sign up at dailystoke.com slash 101. That's dailystoke.com slash 101. Registration closes on Tuesday Now. Build up, don't tear down.
Is there a worse environment to work in than one where bullying and one upsmanship are
the norm?
Sometimes leaders seem to think that this is part of the job description that they're
there to regulate and keep people in line.
In truth, tearing people down is incredibly counterproductive.
Pete Carroll, coach of the Seattle Seahawk, poses a question.
If self-confidence is so important for players, why would a coach ever risk anything to damage
it?
Marcus Aurelius, who had the power to take anyone down at will, even kill them, almost
never actually did.
Instead, he reminded himself that it was better to build up
to be community-minded, modest, prepared,
and tolerant of others.
We are made for cooperation, the stoic said,
and to render works held in common.
Let's think about that going forward.
How can we help build self-confidence of others?
How can we find some of our own in doing so?
We have two quotes from Marcus today.
He says, so someone's good at taking down an opponent.
That doesn't make them more community-minded,
remodest, or well prepared for any circumstances,
or more tolerant for the faults of others.
That's meditations, seven, five, two.
And then for meditations, eight, 12, he says,
whenever you have trouble getting up in the morning, remind yourself that you are made by nature for the purpose of working
with others. And that our own natural purpose that is more fitting and more satisfying.
When we interviewed major general Dan Cain in the leadership challenge, he was saying that
almost never in his career has he ever said, I'm ordering you to do this.
I think we have this fantasy that once we really get power, we become head coach,
you know, we become general, then we won't have to ask, we won't have to persuade, we can just
demand. But that's not how it works. Eisenhower famously said, the art of leadership is getting
people to do things because they want to do them.
Right? Randall Stuttman, who I talked about last week, in the leadership challenge, which I urge you all to check out,
talks about how the job of leaders to make people better. It's not to keep them in line.
It's not to break them down. It's not to mold them into who you want them to be.
It's to make them the best version of themselves.
This is why the stoic virtues of patience and kindness and understanding and empathy are so important.
It's not about brute force. A stoic district, yes, strict with yourself, but we try to be tolerant and kind to others.
And I struggle with this. I really struggle. I think a lot of people who are good at what they do find it very hard to be patient or tolerant of people who are not good at what they do, especially when those people are getting in the way of what you're trying to do.
And I struggled with that.
Moments I've lost my temper, moments I regret as a leader, as a boss, almost invariably
come from that sense of frustration.
Why?
Why?
I told you how I wanted this done.
I went over it like 15 times.
And I have to catch myself and call myself and remember, this isn't making anyone better, and it's making me worse.
I look like an asshole because I'm being an asshole.
And that's not a good way to be.
So we have to learn how to keep ourselves in check,
how to be strict with what we control,
tolerant and understanding, and patient with other people
and with their actions, because that's not in our control.
And this is one of the things that ancient historians
credit Marcus really is with,
that he was very tolerant of the flaws with others,
that he found a way to work with them,
that he found a way to get things out of them,
that he found a way to put them to good use.
And I think there's not a better endorsement
of a leader than that, our ability to not expect
perfection of other people.
This was something Rick Fox famously said about Kobe Bryant.
That Kobe Bryant struggled to realize that not everyone was Kobe Bryant.
And in the ancient world, there was an expression, we can't all be Kato's.
But no one had to understand this more than Kato.
That not everyone was like him.
Not everyone was as good as him.
Not everyone naturally understood or was committed to these things, the way that he was.
And so you have to understand that your job is still, ideally, to get people closer to that
ideal, to make them better.
But you're not going to do it through force, you're not going to do it through bullying,
you're definitely not going to do it through humiliation, you're definitely not going
to do it through yelling.
And in fact, when you are yelling, you have almost always screwed up as a boss
Is there tactically sometimes it needs to be done to send a message sure maybe
But this is almost always a rationalization of a of an impulse that's gotten out of control or struggle
We're having so today and this week
I want you to think about the idea of being calm being collected collected, being kind, being a builder, not a destroyer,
being an asker, not an orderer or a commander, right?
Convince, persuade, inspire, don't demand, don't bully, don't force.
You will get more, you will get more this way, I promise.
And I hope you journal on this in the in the day
I was doing journal if you're doing it
And just a thought to think about build people up make them better
Don't need sheer force. You don't need anger. Don't need to order them persuade
Make them do it because they want to do it make them do it because they've seen the results when you've done it
That's the Stoic way.
Hey Prime Members, you can listen to the Daily Stoic early and ad free on Amazon Music,
download the Amazon Music app today,
or you can listen early and add free with Wondery Plus in Apple Podcasts.
We can't see tomorrow, but we can hear it.
Tomorrow sounds like hydrogen being added to natural gas to make it more sustainable.
It sounds like solar panels generating thousands of megawatts,
and it sounds like carbon being captured and stored, keeping it out of our atmosphere.
We've been bridging to a sustainable energy future for more than 20 years.
Because what we do today helps ensure tomorrow is on. And bridge, life takes energy.
and bridge. Life takes energy.