The Daily Stoic - Which Approach Will You Take? | The Sign Of True Education
Episode Date: March 22, 2024✉️ 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.📱 Fo...llow us: Instagram, Twitter, YouTuSee 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. On Friday, we do double duty, not just reading our daily meditation, but also reading a passage
from the Daily Stoic, my book, 366 Meditations on Wisdom, Perseverance, and the Art of Living, which I wrote with
my wonderful collaborator, translator, and literary agent, Stephen Hanselman.
So today, we'll give you a quick meditation from the Stoics with some analysis from me,
and then we'll send you out into the world to turn these words into works. Which approach will you take? When Seneca was exiled to Corsica, he was overwhelmed with
hopelessness and devastation. We can understand this as we discussed recently. It was unfair and
the charges that he was convicted of were bogus. would have been hard, it would have been lonely and sad.
It's just interesting that a generation later,
a lesser known Stoic, Musonius Rufus,
you can read a great translation of his work
in this book called,
"'That One Should Disdain Hardship,
A Care at the Painter Porch."
Anyways, Musonius is exiled to a different island.
It's equally unfair and it's hard and it's lonely.
But as I write in,
lives of the Stoics,
what made Musonius so remarkable is what he did next. He set about improving the island
he was banished to. He taught things to the locals. He helped discover a natural spring
that brought everyone fresh drinking water. It's one thing to just not be overwhelmed by the
situation you're in. That's basic Stoicism. What Musonius did was next level.
He accepted his fate, yet he refused to see it as static.
He found a way to improve things, to be of service,
to keep himself busy.
He made a positive difference.
Eventually someone would do that in Corsica too,
as we said, it's now a vacation destination,
but it wasn't Seneca.
He couldn't see the potential.
He was too consumed with his own situation
to see what was in front of him.
A lot of us do that.
But Musonius shows us a better way,
a way to make a better world
and to make things better for ourselves.
Hey, it's Ryan Holiday.
Welcome to another episode of the Daily Stoic Podcast. Today,
I have the March 22nd entry from the Daily Stoic, the sign of true education. I am holding
the hardcover edition. Today's quote comes to us from Epictetus's Discourses 122.
What is it then to be properly educated, he asks.
Is it learning to apply our natural preconceptions
to the right thing according to nature?
And beyond that, to separate the things that lie
within our power from those that don't.
A degree on a wall means you're educated
as much as shoes on your feet mean that you're
walking.
It's a start, but it's hardly sufficient.
Otherwise, how would so many educated people make unreasonable decisions or miss so many
obvious things?
Partly it's because they forget that they ought to focus only on that which lies within
their power to control.
A surviving fragment from the philosopher Heraclitus
expresses that reality.
Many who have learned from Hesiod,
the countless names, gods and monsters,
never understand that day and night are one.
Just as you can walk plenty well without shoes,
you don't need to step into a classroom
to understand the basic fundamental reality of nature
and our proper role in it.
Begin with awareness and reflection, not just once,
but every single second of every single day.
I guess I am both educated and not educated.
It's funny, I was just trying to talk to someone
about this the other day. I realized I was remembering that my college admissions essay to a bunch of the colleges
I wanted to get into I wrote about that Mark Twain quote about that never letting schooling get in the way of your education
which I thought was pretty clever and
certainly captured my philosophy of learning at that time and
Then also in my youthful arrogance and certainly captured my philosophy of learning at that time.
And then also in my youthful arrogance,
didn't quite conceive how that's like the exact opposite
of what you would wanna communicate
to a college admissions expert or college admissions,
whatever their job is called, I don't know.
I didn't get into that many colleges.
But the point is, I ended up getting into a pretty good school.
I went to U.S.U. Riverside, I had a scholarship,
I was an honor student, but I dropped out
at the end of my sophomore year.
And it's funny, that's where my college education began.
That's, my post-grad work came before I graduated,
but after I left school, some people go,
oh, did you find, some people ask me about
where I heard about Stoicism,
and I say I learned about it in college,
but I have to go, but not from college, right?
I was writing for the college newspaper,
I was covering an event, I met a person,
that person told me about Epictetus.
Right?
And even then my understanding, my writing about Stoicism, which I did for a good chunk
of my twenties, is very different than my understanding of it now, having had kids,
having been through a pandemic, having been through the ups and downs of life, having
success, having faced adversity and difficulty, bumped
up into my limitations, hit rock bottom in some things, right?
We change and we grow and then from this we become truly educated.
And Epictetus would also say in one of my other favorite quotes from me, he says, only
the educated are free.
His point, I think you can combine these two quotes when he's saying that one of the things that to be properly educated
does for you is it allows you to learn how to separate the things that lie within our power
from those that don't. And it is in this that we become free, right? And understanding that impressing other people,
chasing the wrong things,
chasing the things that other people are chasing, right?
Being worked up about the things
that everyone else has worked up about.
That these are not only the mark of the uneducated,
these are also the mark of a kind of servitude or slavery,
or certain, let's just say less dramatically,
evidence of not being free.
And so that's what I just so love about the Stoics.
I love what they taught me.
I love the rabbit holes they sent me down.
I heard about Heraclitus through the Stoics.
I heard I am a self-educated student of the Stoics.
I had no professor guiding me on this journey. I heard I am a self-educated student of the Stoics.
I had no professor guiding me on this journey.
I've been able to talk to many professors over the years,
but that was all driven by me. It was funny, I read meditations in college,
and then I emailed Gregory Hayes,
and we struck up a, you know, occasional email relationship.
And that was such a big part of my learning journey,
just reaching out to people and asking questions,
being a student long past actually officially being a student.
Although funny thing I was just pulled out my wallet
the other day and my student ID is still in there
and I keep it in there.
And I just sort of a reminder to me
to always, always stay a student
because being a student, being educated,
trying to always learn.
This is where our freedom begins.
This is where we find our freedom.
This is what frees us.
So that's today's message.
Thank you for listening.
You don't have to listen to this podcast, right?
You're choosing.
There's so many hilarious, amazing, fascinating, whatever podcasts out there, but you chose
to listen to one about an obscure school of ancient philosophy.
You're trying to get better and improve yourself.
And I think that's really cool.
I'll talk to you all soon.
I'll talk to you all soon.
I'll talk to you all soon.
I'll talk to you all soon.
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