The Daily Stoic - Until You Get There, Try This | Ask DS
Episode Date: February 1, 2024Maybe towards the end, it’s possible to get to that level. Maybe after a lifetime of study and practice, a Stoic can come to not just understand but to live up to the insight that Marcus Au...relius writes about in *Meditations—*that things aren’t asking to be judged by us, that we always ‘have the power to have no opinion.’ Maybe Marcus Aurelius got there himself.If so, good for him.But most likely he didn’t. And most likely, you’re nowhere close either.In the meantime, why don’t you at least try to voice fewer of those opinions. If we can’t stop ourselves from judging things that aren’t asking to be judged by us, if we can’t stop ourselves from having thoughts about things that have little to do with us, we can at least try to keep those judgments and thoughts to ourselves.-In today's Ask Daily Stoic, Ryan talks Leadership / Obstacle is the Way to 200 HOLT managers and executive leaders from 50 plus locations in Texas and Oklahoma. HOLT CAT is a leader in heavy caterpillar equipment, engines, machines, caterpillar equipment product and provide rental services at holtcat in Texas.✉️ 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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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.
But thank you for listening
and we hope this is of use to you.
Until you get there, try this. Maybe towards the end, it's possible to get to that level.
Maybe after a lifetime of study and practice,
is still it can come not just to understand
but to live up to the insight
that Marcus Aurelius writes about in meditations
that things aren't asking
to be judged by us, that we always have the power to have no opinion.
Maybe Marcus Aurelius even got there himself.
If so, good for him.
But most likely he didn't.
And most likely you're nowhere close either.
In the meantime, why don't you at least try to voice fewer of these opinions?
If we can't stop
ourselves from judging things that aren't asking to be judged by us, if we can't
stop ourselves from having thoughts about things that have little to do with
us, we can at least try to keep those thoughts and judgments to ourselves. We
can just keep our mouth shut. We don't have to verbalize our yuck for someone
else's yum. We don't have to voice our disagreement. We don't have to comment. We don't have to get offended. We can just keep quiet, focus on what we control,
and not cause unnecessary trouble for anyone. Most of all, ourselves. This podcast is brought to you in part by Audible.
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Listen now on Audible. Each after this we do have Ryan's latest book, Courage Is Calling, that I just listened to
and it's phenomenal and very thought provoking.
But in your book you go into depth
and you went a little bit into it's day around preparation.
And you talked a little bit about it,
you know, eating the frog and how you do that
and you alluded to your morning,
you don't actually eat the frog,
but maybe some days you go to your morning, you don't actually eat the frog, but maybe some days, you go on your walk.
Can you maybe share with this group,
because, well, and with me,
when I think about soldiers,
when I think about athletes,
it's easy for me to think about preparation, right?
With lifting weights, doing drills, scrimmaging,
battlefield techniques, right?
But in the business world,
or in maybe even your personal life with parenting
or finances or death of family,
it's hard to, in my mind,
it's hard to physically think about that.
Yeah, how do you practice?
Do you, maybe how you do it,
or how maybe you've seen other people
and are like, dang, that guy does it,
or girl does it really well.
Can you maybe share a little bit about that?
And then we'll open it up for Q&A.
Yeah, that's the tricky thing.
I think a lot of games,
whether it's chess or sports or music or whatever,
it's a constrained set of rules or systems
so you can practice, right?
I heard a great question there,
like do musicians get better by practicing their scales? Well, what are the scales of what you do? a strange set of rules or systems so you can practice. I heard a great question there, like,
musicians get better by practicing their scales.
What are the scales of what you do?
That's sort of the million dollar question.
And the people that can figure that out
have the ability to practice,
and the people that don't don't.
For me, writing is the thing you get better at
by doing lots of writing.
And so, obviously I write books,
but I write a daily email, I write two daily emails,
I write articles, I'm always trying to think, how is books, but I write a daily email. I have two daily emails. I write articles.
I'm always trying to think, how is this thing
that I'm doing over here making me better at the important thing
that I have to do?
But the other way to think about it
is think about a comedian.
A comedian gets great by the amount of stage time
that they have, or an athlete, the amount of reps that you have.
Reps in practice matter, of course,
but so do reps in a game.
This is why they give players garbage time minutes,
is just to figure out how you perform when it's real,
when the pads are off or on,
or however you want to think about it.
One of the things I think about is,
this pertains to obstacles, is like,
let's say I have to let someone go,
or let's say I have to have an unpleasant conversation
with someone, or let's say I have to let someone go, or let's say I have to have an unpleasant conversation with someone, or let's say I have to do something
that I don't like doing.
I just, one of the ways I get through that is I go,
this is practice for those kinds of things, right?
So this is practice for, I'm gonna have to have
an even more uncomfortable conversation
about letting someone go 10 years from now.
How am I gonna be prepared for that?
It's gonna be because I've done it a lot of times before,
now, and then.
Whenever I'm going through stuff,
even something like a pandemic or you have some medical issue,
it's like, hey, this is toughening me up.
This is practice.
So the decision to be present,
to really think about what you're doing,
to not just go through it in autopilot,
is a way I think to become better at it, to actually use that time.
If you're a comedian and you have a thousand hours of stage time but you're just sort of
coasting through it, that's not going to be the same as someone who for 500 hours really
consciously prepared and thought about it and debriefed and looked at it. So I think while we don't live in such an artificial universe
as an athlete or an artist or something,
we can decide that what we're doing is practice
for something in the future.
At the very least, it's practice for a more difficult future.
And by surviving this and getting through whatever this is,
we're better for having gone through that experience.
Thank you.
How much time and energy then do you spend
or do you see other great spend looking at the past?
How well did I do that conversation?
How well did I write that book?
How well did I make that business decision?
Do you spend it?
Cause there's obviously a school of thought that says,
you know, drop the past, right?
Just keep moving forward.
So do you, do you or do you see others spend a lot of time
or the Stoics like spend a lot of time on the past?
I interviewed a NASCAR driver, Brad Kessilowski
on my podcast a few months ago.
And he was, he was, I was talking to him about this
and he was saying that he'd just been reading a book,
which I bought, I haven't read yet,
called Debrief to Win.
The idea that you have to debrief after each thing.
And I was asking him about his practice.
He was like, I even watch every interview that he does.
He watches the interview after not,
because he likes watching himself.
He's like, I hate it.
But he's like, I watch film of everything that I do.
And I think that's one thing you see across all sports
and then military, it's obviously not as filmed,
but the idea of like,
we're gonna break this down to the millisecond.
What could I have done here?
What could I have done here?
Look at how I screwed up there.
So the idea of watching film is really, really important.
Pete Carroll talks about this too.
He even, at the end of the year,
he forces his coaches to watch film of them
on the sidelines coaching games.
Like he forces them through the same unpleasant process
that the players go.
Because I think often we think of it going a certain way,
but to everyone else it was really different.
So I think, yeah, breaking down what you're doing,
really look at it.
How could that have gone better?
Where do we screw up?
I think the premeditation of malorum is great.
You know, the premeditation, the premortem,
but you also gotta do the postmortem. 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. Hey, Prime members, you can listen to the Daily Stoic Early and Add Free on Amazon Music,
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