The Daily Stoic - When You Should Give Up
Episode Date: February 5, 2019No one would ever call Winston Churchill a quitter. His whole reputation is built on his instinct to fight. He was the lone objector when appeasement toward Hitler reigned as policy in the 19...30s. He was the one strong enough to inspire the British people to hold out against the Nazi bombardment and a potential invasion until America entered the war. His personal motto was KBO...Keep Buggering On.You may have even heard the first part of his famous speech which he gave to the boys at the Harrow School, which he had attended as a child, “Never give in. Never, never, never, never—in nothing, great or small, large or petty.”But did you know there was a second part to it? That Churchill wasn’t saying to hold out forever in every circumstance? This is the full quote:“Never give in. Never, never, never, never—in nothing, great or small, large or petty. Never give in except to convictions of honor and good sense.”So there you have the famous never-quitter explaining the conditions under which you should quit or give in: when you are honor bound or when it makes no sense to continue.An example: When Churchill lost the confidence of his government in November 1915, he resigned his position and enlisted in the Royal Scots Fusiliers. His old path ceased to be even remotely viable, so he found another way to serve with honor. And while Hitler might have thought that Churchill was insane for not negotiating a peace with Germany, Churchill actually did see a way through, and knew there was a good chance his country could endure. In one case, it was good sense to give in, in the other, it wasn’t.The Stoics were all about this balance. Yes, they were big proponents of perseverance and persistence. No, they didn’t run away just because things got hard. But they weren’t masochists either. They didn’t believe in hurling themselves against a wall that would never give way.Marcus used a vivid analogy for people who continue to be the same person, despite the obvious signs it wasn’t working—he said they were like "animal fighters at the games—torn half to pieces, covered in blood and gore, and still pleading to be held over till tomorrow...to be bitten and clawed again."Today we talk about this colloquially as the definition of insanity: doing the same thing over and over again, expecting a different result.That’s no way to live. It’s good to be tough, but hardly noble to be stupid. Sticking to something is commendable, but not if that inflexibility comes at the expense of other, viable solutions or if it becomes its own vice. Remember that today. Never, ever, ever, ever give in...except when it makes sense. Let honor be your guide, not bullheadedness nor cowardice.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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insight, wisdom necessary for living good life. Each one of these passages is based on the 2000-year-old philosophy that has guided some of history's
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When you should give up. No one would ever call Winston Churchill a quitter. His whole
reputation is built on his instinct to fight.
He was the lone objector when appeasement toward Hitler
reigned as policy in the 1930s.
He was the one strong enough to inspire the British people
to hold out against the Nazi bombardment
and a potential invasion until America entered the war.
His personal motto was K, B, O, keep buggering on.
You may have heard the first part of his famous speech which he gave to the boys at the
Harrow School, which he had attended as a child. He said, never give in, never, never,
never, in nothing great or small, large or petty. But did you know there was a second
part to it that Churchill wasn't
saying to hold out forever in every circumstance? This is the full quote, never give in, never,
never, never in nothing great or small, large, or petty, never give in except to convictions
of honor and good sense. So there you have the famous Nevequitter explaining the
conditions under which you should quit or give in when you are honor bound or
when it makes no sense to continue. In example, when Churchill lost the confidence
of his government in November 1915, he resigned his position and enlisted in
the British Army. His old path ceased to be even remotely viable, so he found
another way to serve with honor. And while Hitler might have thought that Churchill was insane
for not negotiating a piece with Germany, Churchill actually did see a way through, and knew there
was a good chance his country could endure. In one case, it was good sense to give in, and another,
it wasn't. The Stokes were all about this balance.
Yes, they were proponents of perseverance and persistence.
No, they didn't run away just because things got hard.
But they weren't masochists either.
They didn't believe in hurling themselves against a wall that would never give way.
Marcus used a vivid analogy for people who continue to be the same person, despite
all the obvious signs it wasn't working. He said they were like animal fighters at the
games, torn half to pieces covered in blood and gore, and still pleading to be held over
till tomorrow, to be bitten and clawed again. Today we talk about this colloquially as the definition of insanity,
doing the same thing over and over again
and expecting a different result.
That's no way to live.
It's good to be tough,
but hardly noble to be stupid.
Sticking to something is commendable,
but not if that inflexibility comes
at the expense of other viable solutions
or if it becomes its own vice.
Remember that today. Never ever ever ever given. Except when it makes sense, let honor be
your guide, not bullheadedness nor cowardice.
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