The Daily Stoic - We All Carry A Debt (Will We Repay?) | Role Models
Episode Date: June 3, 2024📕 Pre-order Right Thing, Right Now and get exclusive bonuses! To learn more and pre-order your own copy, visit dailystoic.com/justice✉️ Want Stoic wisdom delivered to your inbox daily?... Sign up for the FREE Daily Stoic email at https://dailystoic.com/dailyemail🏛 Get Stoic inspired books, medallions, and prints to remember these lessons at the Daily Stoic Store: https://store.dailystoic.com/📱 Follow us: Instagram, Twitter, YouTube, TikTok, and 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.
Each day we bring you a meditation inspired by the ancient
stoics, illustrated with 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 happen to be doing.
So let's get into it.
We all carry a debt.
Will we repay?
Ralph Ellison was walking through a building
on the grounds of Harvard after dinner one evening when by chance he happened
to look up. There in Memorial Hall, which sits on Cambridge Street just across from
Harvard Yard, he saw a long list of names carved into the marble. I knew its
significance almost without knowing, the author later recounted, and the shock of
recognition filled me with a kind of anguish.
Something within me cried out, no, against that painful knowledge, for I knew that I
stood within the presence of Harvard men who had given their young lives to set me free.
Ellison had not had an easy life.
He had experienced race riots and lynching and all the terrible injustices that came
from the era of Jim Crow. Besides, like many of us, he was busy with his own life, his own
problems, his own ambitions. But there, looking at the names of the Union dead from Harvard,
he was struck by a sense of indebtedness that would never again leave him. This indebtedness
is something we all carry, whoever we are, wherever we come from. We are indebted to the good that was done for us.
Someone took care of us when we were small.
Someone invented the device that you are listening to this on.
Someone sacrificed for a future generation to have what it has.
The Stoics learn the hard way, many lessons that we are able to gain easily by reading
a book.
We have to pay that forward.
There's also a debt that we have to pay back.
Our ancestors are not all union men.
We live on stolen land.
Our museums are filled with looted goods.
Our progress came at great expense
to the environment and to other species.
Who made the device you're holding?
Who made the t-shirt you're wearing?
Who worked the land that fed Seneca
while he wrote his letters?
Hint, it was
slaves. One of the subjects in Right Thing Right Now, the new book, is Albert Schweitzer, a
philosopher and doctor who dedicated his life to setting up and working in medical facilities in
South Africa. When asked why he did this, he explained that in light of the horrors of
colonialism from the then only recent past. He didn't have a choice.
"'We are burdened with a great debt,' he said.
"'We are not free to confer or not confer these benefits
"'on these people as we please.
"'It is our duty,' he said.
"'Anything we give them is not benevolence but atonement.
"'This is the foundation from which all deliberations
"'about works of mercy must begin. Our ancestors were wonderful
and they were terrible. We, their descendants, all over the world are indebted to them for both.
We have to pay forward the good they did. We have to make right the wrongs they did.
We don't control what they did, to borrow from the dichotomy of control at the center of
stoicism, but we control what we do now, here in our own times. Doing better is up to us.
This is what the virtue of justice demands.
This is what decency and duty demands of us.
Will you do it?
This idea of paying forward good deeds,
of contributing to a brighter future in the presence,
it's one of the themes in the new book,
Right Thing Right Now, Good Values, Good Character,
and Good Deeds.
It's officially out on June 11th,
which is, I can't believe it, in a couple days,
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I'm so excited.
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and I've got a bunch of awesome bonuses for you.
You can grab it at dailystoke.com slash justice.
You can get signed pages from the manuscript.
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and a bunch of other awesome
stuff including the playlist I made when I was writing the book and some bonus chapters
that couldn't fit in the book.
You can grab all that at dailystoke.com.
You can get the book as an ebook, audiobook, anywhere books are sold, but I would love
for you to grab it over at dailystoke.com.
That's where all the details are.
Right thing right now.
Good values, good character, good deeds comes out on June 11. Thanks.
Role Models. And this is from this week's entry in the Daily
Steilig Journal. You can check out the Daily Steilig Journal
366 days of writing and reflection on the art of living
by me Ryan Holiday anywhere books are sold, including The Painted Porch, my bookstore at thepaintedporch.com.
Adoption was a widespread practice in Roman society, especially the senatorial class and
as a provision for imperial succession.
Marcus Aurelius was himself the adopted son of the Emperor Antoninus Pius, who himself
was adopted by the emperor Hadrian
so that Marcus could one day succeed them both to the purple.
While Seneca was never adopted, his brother Novartis was,
becoming Gaius, who in the New Testament
refuses to press charges against Saint Paul.
But Seneca liked to look at the phenomenon of adoption
the other way around, saying that we can always choose
whose children we want to be.
For him, Cato the towering resolute stoic
who railed against Julius Caesar
in defense of the Republic
was always standing by in his mind.
The first book of Marcus Aurelius' Meditations, in fact,
is a catalog of all the people that Marcus had learned from
and the lessons he had taken from their lives.
So this week, take a minute to think of the models
that you can follow, wise and admirable people
that you can measure yourself against.
We like to say that we don't get to choose our parents,
Seneca said, that they were given to us by chance,
yet truly we can choose whose children we'd like to be,
that's in On the Brevity of Life.
But then in Moral Let letters, Seneca said,
we can remove most sins if we have a witness standing by
as we are about to go wrong.
The soul should have someone it can respect,
by whose example it can make
its inner sanctum more invaluable.
Happy is the person who can improve others,
not only when present, but even when in their thoughts.
I think for me, this idea of choosing whose children you want to be is great, right?
Whether you had amazing parents or the world's worst parents,
you can also choose to be the children of the greats of history.
We did a Daily Daddy not long ago, where Bruce Springsteen is talking about
being an ancestor or a ghost. You know, who are the ghosts that haunt you and who are the
ancestors that inspire you?
And how can you choose to follow in the right footsteps?
For me, Robert Greene is kind of an adopted father.
He's about my father's age,
but he's who I want to be as a person in many ways.
Professionally, he's deeply inspiring to me.
The way even that he has spent so much time and energy
and patience shaping me into the writer that I became,
that in and of itself has been inspiring
and is an example I try to follow in.
So like I've never met Marcus Aurelius.
I'm not related to Seneca.
I have no lineage that puts me back
into ancient Rome
with Epictetus, but we can still be the descendants
of these people.
We can still be their children.
James Baldwin was famously talking to his nephew,
and he said, you come from steady peasant stock,
people who built the railroads, people who escaped
via the Underground Railroad, people who responded
to the blows of fate and life
with dignity and poise and, and creativity and perseverance.
Now, is this literally true? Does he know for a fact about
the railroads or the Underground Railroads? No. But we choose
what tradition we hail from, we choose whose child we want to
be by the example that we follow by the heroes we give ourselves in our mind.
And that's what today's entry is about.
And I hope you take a minute to think about whose footsteps
you're following in and what example you are setting so that
perhaps someday someone else might choose to be adopted by you. If you like The Daily Stoic and thanks for listening, you can listen early and ad free
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