The Daily Stoic - This is What Winners Do | Ask DS
Episode Date: April 13, 2023In April 1960, the writer Richard Whalen was trying to meet with Diane Nash and the sit-in students for a Time Magazine cover story. These young college students had suddenly become the focus... of an immense amount of attention, not just from the press but from the police and politicians and the rest of the civil rights leaders (we have a great podcast episode on the Stoicism of the Civil Rights movements here with Thomas Ricks).How were these kids going to upend years of stymied racial progress?---And in today's Ask Daily Stoic, Ryan answers questions covering topics that include the top five Stoic habits that can improve your life, strategies for staying calm in difficult situations, how to find good books to read, and more, ✉️ 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.
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Hey, prime members, you can listen to the Daily Stoic podcast early and add free on Amazon
music. Download the app today.
Welcome to the Daily Stoic podcast where each day we read a passage of ancient wisdom
designed to help you in your everyday life.
Well on Thursdays, we not only read the daily meditation, but we answer some questions
from listeners and fellow Stoics.
We're trying to apply this philosophy just as you are.
Some of these come from my talks.
Some of these come from Zoom sessions
that we do with daily stoic life members
or as part of the challenges.
Some of them are from interactions I have on the street
when there happen to be someone there recording.
Thank you for listening.
And we hope this is of use to you.
[♪ Music playing in background, music playing in background,
this is what winners do.
In April 1960, the writer Richard Whalen was trying to meet
with Diane Nash in the sit-in students
for a time magazine cover story.
These young students had suddenly become the focus
of an immense amount of attention,
not just from the press, but from the police
and politicians and the rest of civil rights leaders.
How are these kids going to up-end years
of stymied racial progress?
How could they possibly challenge a system
in which the police and the courts
and elected leaders in public opinion were all against them?
Could they win?
It seemed very unlikely.
Richard Whalen was stunned to find that he had trouble asking these students' questions
because they were not particularly interested in meeting with him.
They were too busy.
They did not have the time, even though he represented what was at the time, one of the most
important publications in the world.
Finally, Diane and her team agreed they would see him at 6 a.m. before the morning strategy that started their day.
Whalen could only marvel 6 a.m. the only time they can meet with me is 6 a.m. They're
going to win, aren't they? He said, winners attack the day like that. It doesn't matter
what their cause is. They win that discussion that Marcus Aurelius has with himself in meditation. So one, we all must win when the alarm goes
off. Yes, it is warmer under the covers, but we are not meant for that. We have a duty.
Our nature, justice demands something from us. It demands that we get up, that we get
after it, that we wear ourselves doing it. It's what you must do if you want to win.
And actually my favorite chapter,
the opening chapter of part one of Disciplines Destiny
is attack the dawn, get after it as Marcus really
has did, as Diane Nash and the sit-in students did.
I hope you're listening to this early.
And if not, I hope you're listening to it early tomorrow
because you get up a little bit earlier than you want.
You get after it, you do what nature and justice demands
of you and check out Discipline Test
and Anywhere Books are Sold.
We've even got signed copies here
at the Daily Stoic Store
and at the Pandid Port here in Bastrop, Texas.
It's funny, I talk to lots of people
and a good chunk of those people
haven't been readers for a long time.
They've just gotten back into it. And I always love hearing that and they tell me how they fall in love with reading. They're reading
more than ever. And I go, let me guess, you listen audio books, don't you? And it's true. And almost
invariably, they listen to them on Audible. And that's because Audible offers an incredible
selection of audio books across every genre from bestsellers and new releases to celebrity
memoirs. And of course, ancient philosophy, all my books are available on audio, read by me for the most part. Audible lets you enjoy all your audio
entertainment in one app. You'll always find the best of what you love, or something new to discover,
and as an audible member, you get to choose one title a month to keep from their entire catalog,
including the latest best sellers and new releases. You'll discover thousands of titles from
popular favorites, exclusive new series, and exciting new voices in audio. You can check out Stillness is the key, the daily dad. I just recorded so that's up on
Audible now. Coming up on the 10-year anniversary of the obstacle is the way audio books, so all
those are available. And new members can try Audible for free for 30 days. Visit audible.com slash
daily stoke or text daily stoke to 500-500. That's audible.com slash daily stoke or text daily stoke to 500 500, that's audible.com slash daily stoke, a text daily stoke to 500 500.
I welcome to Ask Daily Stoke where we answer your stoke inspired questions. The first question
we've got today are what are five habits that can improve my life? So I got a couple for you. So
number one, I would say wake up early,
right? Marcus really opens book five of meditations, talking about waking up early, about getting out
from under the covers. You don't accomplish great things laying in bed. You got to get up early.
And I like to get up early because that's where the stillness is. There's fewer interruptions.
You know, it's, it's just great. I think the next, the next thing from the Stokes would be journaling, right?
Are you sitting down and spending some time putting pen
or pencil to paper and preparing or reviewing
or reflecting on what lies ahead,
on what you did recently on, you know,
just things you want to improve or get better.
Marcus Aurelius' meditations is the way that he gets
to where he gets at
the end of his life. That's how he accumulates wisdom. He's writing down these lessons, these
observations. He's following Epic Titus' advice, which is to keep these ideas and words
around you all the time and to be sort of like just engaging with them on a deep and
active level. The other I would say is like go for a walk every morning
when I get up, I go for a long walk.
This morning I went about three and a half miles.
My son didn't take the phone, I got up early,
was outside, I was active.
You know, Centipede talks about,
he's like, look, a mind overstressed is easily fractured.
He says you have to take long, wandering walks.
And there is a reason almost every philosopher is an active
walker. Putting the body in motion is a way to activate the brain at a deeper
level that's really good. I think you would you would have a better life if and I
know I'm just something I'm actively working on my life. The more kindnesses
you can do for other people, the better your life will be. So pay for somebody's
coffee when you're paid for the person behind you in line.
Leave a big tip, pick up trash by the time that you see laying by the side of the road.
Do something nice for other people.
Seneca's line was every person you meet is an opportunity for kindness.
And then the last thing is, are you making time for yourself in your life?
Mark Serrealis says, like, ask yourself at every moment, is this necessary? Do I need to do this?
Or is this some made up obligation? So separating the essential from the
inessential, so if I was like the fifth thing, if I was trying to improve your life,
I'd just start saying no to things. Like, what could you say no to? What doesn't matter?
What don't you need to do anymore?
And you will carve out more time for yourself, more time for philosophy, and more time for happiness
if you can do that. The next question is, how can I stay calm in difficult situations? Well,
to me, this is like the essence of stoicism, right? Like, the whole, even that's what the word
stoke means in the sort of common parlance is like, how do you stay
calm, how do you not be tricked around by your emotions? So I think the first part is like
sort of asking yourself, is freaking out going to make this better? Yes or no?
Right? If freaking out is, and on the rare case, you know, go for it, but the reality is most
of the time strong emotions are not making situations better.
You, there's something that your, you know, boyfriend or girlfriend is doing that's bothering you, is yelling at them about it, going to make them better, is being angry about it or sad about it or depressed about it or worried about it, is that making it better?
No, talking to them kindly and nicely and rationally is what's going to make them better. Realizing that calm is contagious is really important too.
So who do you surround yourself? Right? That idea, you become the average of the people
you spend time with. Are you spending your time around calm people or the people that
you're around? Amping that up. So like if you're around people that are, you know, are
convinced politically that the sky is falling all the time, you're going to think that the sky is falling all the time.
So realizing that calm is contagious and surrounding yourself with the right people is really important.
At the core of the stoic practice about this is like that idea of objectivity,
you know, epictetus is it's not things that upset us, it's our judgment about things.
So realizing that the events are objective, there is no good or bad, there is just what
there is.
And so reminding yourself, no, I got in a car accident, that's it.
It's, I don't know that it's going to cost a fortune on my insurance company.
I don't know that my back is going to soar and be sore.
I don't know that it was so and so as fall.
I don't know that this was terrible luck.
I don't know that I got screwed over. I don't know that I got screwed over.
You don't know any of that.
All you know is that you've got in a car accident.
All you know is that somebody said something to you.
You don't know that it was rude.
You can't say for sure that it was ill intention.
It just is what it is.
So this objectivity is really important.
And then when we realize that objectivity is important,
this can lead to the last part,
the thing that's very calming for me,
which is reminding
myself that I have the power to tell myself a different story about this event.
So that idea of the obstacle being the way that I can choose for this to be good, I can
choose for this to be a positive is the power that I have.
So I can't control that this thing happen, but I can control the story that I'm going
to tell myself about it. So, you know, there's a famous story about an employee who costs like, until like, 10
million dollars.
Look, I walks into his boss's office and he says, you know, you're going to fire me for
this, right?
And boss says, why would I fire you?
I just paid 10 million dollars teaching you something.
And so that's a person who's decided that he's going to see this differently.
He's going to see, he's going to, he knows that getting angry is not gonna make it better.
He knows that the event is objective, but that he could choose to tell himself a story
which is that he is now invested in this person, that this person is learned from it
and that they are both going to get better for it.
That's how he was able to calmly and rationally, it's successfully navigate a difficult situation.
only and rationally, it's successfully navigate a difficult situation.
So the third question for today is,
how can I find good books to read?
This is a question we get a lot.
It's something I think about.
So first off, there are lots of books on stoicism
about stoicism.
I suggest you read all those.
What I like to do when I'm reading,
and this is how I found many of the stoic texts
that I like and many of my favorite books
of all different stripes, my rule is like,
what is a book that is mentioned in the book
that I'm reading?
So you're reading Marcus Reales
and he mentions that Petitus.
Well, check that person out.
You're reading the introduction to Gregory Hayes'
translation of meditations and he mentions an essay by Matthew Arnold
about Marcus Aurelis.
We'll read that.
And now you're introduced to this guy Matthew Arnold.
Well, who is he, is someone written a book about him?
What are some of the books that he's written?
So I kind of follow this chain method
where each book that I'm reading,
I read a different related book to that book.
And so this has taken me down all sorts of fascinating rabbit
holes.
You know, I, what I'm always looking for,
you know, where I'm not looking for books
is the New York Times book review, or the New York Times best
seller list, or the new edition's table at Barnes and Noble.
I want to read a really good book,
and then I want to read the people that influenced
or shaped the thinking in that book that I just read.
So for me, this sort of chain method is really great.
And so I would suggest that.
Obviously, in my books, that's one of the things I do.
I have a recommended reading list at the back,
but I'm also trying to cite different authors,
and then obviously they're all referenced
in the bibliography, but don't just read randomly,
don't just roll the dice, try to find connections
between one book you're reading and another book
that might be related to that.
And then what you're getting is you're getting
sort of overlap an idea.
So people ask Colin to be able to read so fast.
Well, one of the ways I'm able to do that
is that I'm never reading about things that I'm utterly and completely unfamiliar with. I'm reading about related overlapping topics.
And in doing that, I'm able to skim a little bit. I don't have to, I'm never like,
what was that? I totally don't understand. But I'm sort of inching my way to understanding that way.
So thanks is another great episode of Ask Daily Stoic.
Keep your questions coming.
You can email them to us at infoatdailystoic.com. Hey, prime members, you can listen to the Daily Stoke early and add free on Amazon Music,
download the Amazon Music app today, or you can listen early and add free with Wondery
Plus in Apple podcasts.
Celebrity feuds are high stakes.
You never know if you're just gonna end up on Page Six
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I'm Matt Bellissi.
And I'm Sydney Battle,
and we're the host of Wonderly's new podcast, Dis and Tell,
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What does our obsession with these feuds say about us?
The first season is packed with some pretty messy
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