The Daily Stoic - When the System Breaks Down, Leaders Stand Up
Episode Date: March 18, 2020It began in the East. At least, that’s what the experts think. Maybe it came from animals. Maybe it was the Chinese. Maybe it was a curse from the gods. One thing is certain: it radiated o...ut east, west, north, and south, crossing borders, then oceans, as it overwhelmed the world. The only thing that spread faster than the contagion was the fear and the rumors. People panicked. Doctors were baffled. Government officials dawdled and failed. Travel was delayed or rerouted or aborted altogether. Festivals, gatherings, sporting events—all cancelled. The economy plunged. Bodies piled up.The institutions of government proved very fragile indeed. We’re talking, of course, about the Antonine Plague of 165 CE, a global pandemic with a mortality rate of between 2-3%, which began with flu-like symptoms until it escalated and became gruesome and painfully fatal. Millions were infected. Between 10 and 18 million people eventually died. It shouldn’t surprise us that an ancient pestilence—one that spanned the entire reign of Marcus Aurelius—feels so, well, modern. As Marcus would write in his diary at some point during this horrible plague, history has a way of repeating itself. “To bear in mind constantly that all of this has happened before,” he said in Meditations. “And will happen again—the same plot from beginning to end, the identical staging. Produce them in your mind, as you know them from experience or from history: the court of Hadrian, of Antoninus. The courts of Philip, Alexander, Croesus. All just the same. Only the people different.”This pattern of disease is nauseatingly familiar. It’s a pattern that has repeated itself like a fractal across history. Indeed, we could be talking about the Bubonic Plague (aka the Black Death), the Spanish Flu of 1918, or the cholera pandemics of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, just as easily as we are talking about the Antonine Plague and thinking about the coronavirus pandemic that is spreading across the globe. As Marcus would say, all we’d have to do is change a few dates and names.It can be a very jarring mental exercise for some—thinking about the way the history of disease repeats itself—because we like to view the evolution of human civilization as moving inevitably in some new, unique direction. We like to see history as steady progress. Then when bad things happen, when catastrophe strikes, we feel like the world is coming apart. We suffocate ourselves with breathless shouting about the sky falling and give ourselves heart attacks over not being prepared for what is to come. It’s the same story, unfolded as if from an ancient script, written on the double helix of human DNA. We make the same mistakes. Succumb to the same fears. Endure the same grief and pain… then eventually exult in the same heroism, the same relief, and hopefully, the same kind of emergent leadership. And that, really, is the key to survival, to persevering for the better: Just because history repeats itself is not an excuse to throw up your hands and give yourself up to the whims of Fortune. The Stoics say over and over that it is inexcusable not to learn from the past. “For this is what makes us evil,” once wrote Seneca, who lived two generations before Marcus and watched Rome burn. “We reflect upon only that which we are about to do. And yet our plans for the future descend from our past.” Read the rest at https://dailystoic.com/marcus-aurelius-leadership-during-a-pandemic/See 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. For each day we read a short passage designed to help you cultivate the strength, insight, wisdom necessary for living the good
life. Each one of these passages is based on the 2000-year-old philosophy that
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Hey, this is Ryan Holiday.
We have a special episode today.
I am reading an article we wrote that I'm really excited about.
It was a not-funture research, but I think it will be really important and hopefully it
will take it seriously.
I think it's one of the best things I've written in a while. It began in the east, at least that's
what the experts think. Maybe it came from animals, maybe it was the Chinese, maybe it was a curse
from the gods. One thing is certain, it spiraled east, west, north, and south, crossing borders
then oceans as it overwhelmed the world.
The only thing that spread faster than the contagion was the fear and the rumors.
People panicked, doctors were baffled, government officials doggled and failed.
Travel was delayed or rerouted or aborted altogether.
Festivals, gatherings, sporting events all canceled. the economy plunged, bodies piled up.
The institutions of government proved very fragile indeed. By this point, you know exactly what I'm
talking about. The Antonin plague of the year 165 AD, a global pandemic with a mortality rate of between 2 and 3% which began with flu-like symptoms
until it escalated and became gruesome and painfully fatal.
Millions were infected between 10 and 18 million people died.
Should it surprise us that an ancient pestilence, one that spanned the entire reign of Marcus
Arelius, would feel so, well, modern?
No, we shouldn't. As Marcus Aurelius would write in his diary at some point during this horrible
plague, history has a way of repeating itself. To bear in mind constantly that all of this has
happened before he said in meditations, and will happen again. The same plot from beginning to end, the identical
staging, produced them in your mind as you know from experience or from history, the court of
Hadrian of Antoninus, the courts of Philip Alexander, Crosius, all just the same, only the people
different. We like to view the evolution of human civilization as moving
inevitably in some new unique direction. We like to see history as steady
progress. Then when bad things happen, when catastrophe strikes, we feel like the
world is coming apart. We suffocate in breathless shouting that the sky is
following and that we are not prepared for what is to come. The truth, just as Marcus
repeatedly wrote, is that history is the same thing happening over and over again. The same
story is unfold as if from a script, the same mistakes, the same fears, the same grief and pain as
well, it's the same heroism, the same relief, and hopefully same kind of emergent leadership.
Because that is really the key.
Just because history repeats is not an excuse
to throw up your hands, the stoics say over and over again
that it is inexcusable not to learn from the past.
For this is what makes us evil, Sennaka said,
who lived two generations before Marcus
and watched Rome burn.
He said, we reflect only on that which we are about to do
and yet our plans for the future descend from the past.
So there's the question, what can we learn
from the Antonine plague, what can we find in ourselves
and other people in the lessons of the past
that can guide us as the reality of this crisis sets in?
First, we should count our blessings.
We're lucky that the coronavirus COVID-19 is but a sneeze compared to the
bubonic plague, which killed 25 million people in just a few months in the sixth century, or smallpox, which consistently killed some 400,000 people every single year of the 18th century, or when the measles killed 200 million people in the 19th and 20th centuries,
or when the Spanish flu claimed 50 million souls in 1918.
Indeed, precisely what so worries scientists about COVID-19 is actually a blessing,
the disease is particularly contagious because it doesn't quickly debilitate and kill most of its victims. No one with an active case of SARS
was playing shuffleboard on a cruise ship or skiing in the Alps. They were suffering unto death
within hours. But we can't simply count ourselves lucky with this crisis we have to make our own luck
as all survivors do. If Marcus and Reelius had this choice, he would not have chosen to lead in crisis.
In fact, he wouldn't have chosen to lead at all. He wanted to be a philosopher, not an emperor.
And that was the essential tragedy of Marcus Aurelius by Arnter for Frank Pickling wrote,
no one could have been less equipped to deal with the crisis that now broke over the empire.
Yet, like all great heroes, he surprised everyone by rising to the occasion.
He had no ego and had a keen eye for surrounding himself with brilliant public servants.
As McClinn explains, Marcus Aurelius' shrewd and careful personnel selection is a worthy
study by any person in any position of leadership. He's searched for and brought in the best. He broke
the mold and filled the staff with talent, not aristocrats or cronies. He actually listened
to advice. He empowered people to make decisions. He hired Galen, the most famous physician
and polymath of antiquity, to lead medical lectures and anatomy demonstrations, wanting to
elevate the intellectual tone of his court. It was Galen, whom he empowered to lead the efforts to combat the plague, the smartest
medical mind of his time.
Once his team was in place, Marcus shifted his focus to the growing economic crisis, long
standing debts to the government were canceled.
Fundraising efforts began with a masterstroke of inspirational leadership.
As McLean writes, Marcus conducted
a two-month sale of imperial effects and possessions, putting under the hammer not just sumptuous
furniture from the imperial apartment's gold goblets, silver flaggons, crystals and chandeliers,
but also his wife's silken gold-embroidered robes and her jewels. Funerals for played victims were paid for by the Imperial State.
Reluctantly but unavoidably, Marcus Aurelius also conscripted capital from Rome's upper
classes, knowing that they could afford to pay.
He audited his own officials and allowed no expenditures without approval.
In a crisis, people must trust that their leaders are doing the right thing and that they
are bearing the same weight of the burden as the citizens.
It would be difficult to overstate the fear that must have pervaded the empire.
The streets of Rome were flooded with corpses, danger hung in the air around every corner.
Knowing little about the spread of germs or disease, prone to superstitions, waking up each
day must have been terrifying
for children and adults alike. Romans burned incense, which they thought could keep them
safe, but instead it blanketed the city in thick smoke and odors, which mixed in with
the smell of a city on lockdown in the recent dead.
Certainly no one would have faltered Marcus if he had fled Rome.
Most people have means did. But Marcus stayed at enormous cost to himself. He braved the
deadliest plague of Rome's 900-year history, never showing fear, reassuring his people
by his very presence. He was Churchill during the blitz, inspiring the people to keep calm
and carry on. Except instead of lasting for a few
months, he endured the siege for years without complaint, even as he lost several young children
and his fortune dwindled away.
He was not the leader of China who's rarely seen in public.
He locked down his citizens, but not his doors.
He summoned priests and every sect of doctors, of every specialty, and toured the empire and an attempt to purge it.
Using every purifying technique yet known, he attended funerals, he gave speeches, he showed up for the people,
assuring them that he did not value his safety more than his responsibility.
In this, he is the perfect embodiment of what stoicism means to us today.
He didn't get rattled, he didn't panic, he kept
himself strong for others, he insisted on what was right, never what was politically expedient.
That's not to say he was delusional or reassured the people with false hope or misleading
numbers, as some leaders have. In fact, Marcus was deeply moved by the suffering of the people.
We are told quite vividly by historians of the sincere
weeping of Marcus Aurelius in public after he overheard someone argue, blessed are they
who died in the plague. Good leader is strong, but they feel deeply the pain of others.
Having led the people through the worst of the crisis which stretched on for some 15 years of
his reign, in 180 AD having never hidden or neglected his public
duties, Marcus Aurelius inevitably became exposed and began to show symptoms of the disease.
By his doctor's diagnosis, he knew he had only a few days to live.
He sent for his five most trusted friends to plan for his succession and to ensure a peaceful
transition of power.
Bereft with grief, these advisors were almost too pained to focus.
Marcus Aurelius reproached them with taking such an unfilisophical attitude, McLean writes,
they should instead be thinking about the implications of the Antonin plague and pondering death,
in general, he said.
It is here that the past provides its most powerful and sobering lessons.
Far too often, the first time civilizations realize just how vulnerable they are is when
they find out they've been conquered or are at the mercy of some cruel tyrant or some
uncontainable disease.
It's when somebody famous, like Tom Hanks or Marcus Aurelius fall ill that they get serious.
The result of this delayed awakening is a critical realization.
We are mortal and fragile and that fate can inflict horrible things on our tiny, powerless
bodies.
There is no amount of fleeing or quarantining the reality of human existence.
Momentumori, thou art mortal.
No one, no country, no planet is safe, whereas special is we'd like to think we are.
We are all at the mercy of enormous events outside of our control. You can go at any moment,
Marcus was constantly reminding himself and being reminded of. He made sure that this thought
shaped every choice and action. Be good to each other. That was the prevailing belief of Marcus's
life. A disease like the plague can only threaten your life, he said in meditations.
But evil, selfishness, pride, hypocrisy, fear, these things attack our humanity.
Which is why we must use this terrible crisis as an opportunity to learn.
To remember the core virtues that Marcus are really is tried to live by.
Humility, kindness, service, wisdom, we can't waste time,
we can't take people or things
or our health for granted.
Even if we may now lack this kind
of sacrificial leadership, we have
and should cherish all those other things.
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