The Daily Stoic - Who Is Calling You To Greatness? | Be Stingy With Time
Episode Date: December 6, 2021Ryan discusses the importance of reminding yourself of the greats throughout history, and reads this week’s meditation from The Daily Stoic Journal, on today’s Daily Stoic Podcast.Blinkis...t is the app that gets you fifteen-minute summaries of the best nonfiction books out there. Blinkist lets you get the topline information and the most important points from the most important nonfiction books out there, whether it’s Ryan’s own The Daily Stoic, Yuval Harari’s Sapiens, and more. Go to blinkist.com/stoic, try it free for 7 days, and save 25% off your new subscription, too.Sign up for the Daily Stoic email: https://DailyStoic.com/emailFollow 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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Hey, prime members. You can listen to the Daily Stoic podcast early and add free on Amazon music. Download the app today.
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.
Hi, I'm David Brown, the host of Wunderree's
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Reading is the most important thing you can do and it's one of the best habits to build
into your life.
I wouldn't be here talking to you if I hadn't built a reading habit early in my life.
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Who is calling you to greatness?
If you walk into the locker room of any college program in America, you'll see the numbers
and names of athletes who went on to play in the pros.
If you walk into any stadium or arena in the world, you'll see the numbers and the jerseys of the all-time greats hanging from the rafters.
If you went back in time many centuries ago and walked into the home of any prominent Roman, you'd find the marble busts of great men and women.
If you walk through their cities, you'd have found temples and buildings dedicated to many of those same men and women. If you walk through their cities, you'd have found temples and buildings dedicated
to many of those same men and women.
If you'd stepped into Montaigne's study in the 1500s,
you'd have found carved in the ceiling beams quotes
from the Stoics and the Epicurians
and otherwise philosophers.
Why go through the trouble of doing this?
Why do individuals spend their hard earned money
having statues commissioned and signs put up?
Because it's about creating a culture
It's about creating a real tangible sense of greatness in the rooms and streets that they and their athletes or students are soldiers spend time in
It was about creating a call to something higher or better
Marcus Aurelius would write about how nothing makes us better than hearing or reading or seeing the reminders of people
We admire and the insights they came up with
hearing or reading or seeing the reminders of people we admire and the insights they came up with. Demastinese would talk about the purpose of memorials. It wasn't just to honor the dead or
their accomplishments, but to spur their descendants to follow in their examples. The question for you
today is whether you're putting out that call in your business, for your team, in your home.
Are you putting up the evidence, putting up examples that are hard to live up to. Are you calling yourself and your people to greatness?
On my desk, I have our bust of Marcus Relius and I have our other bust of
Seneca, which you can check out in the Daily Stoke store.
Actually, I've had a bust of Marcus Relius on my desk through writing all of my
books, starting with the obstacles, the way I love it.
I've got our prints on the, the Daily Stoke prints on the wall as well. The idea of being who's calling you to greatness, what examples are you following, and how
are you putting these virtues up for display. Check those out in the Daily Stoke store.
Be stingy with time. One of the most common sayings we hear, and you might have said this yourself, is that life is short.
And it is, but a cynical remark, it's pretty long if you know how to use it.
And the first step to that is not giving so much of this time away to other people.
Being miserly about our time is a powerful exercise, which can keep us from squandering the one truly non-renewable resource.
What in your life consumes a lot of time for no good purpose? What amusements or desires consume
our time without giving us a good return? As you review that list, make a commitment to doing
something about it. Life is short after all, and you don't have much
despair. And this is from this week's entry in the Daily Steuers Journal, 366 days of writing
and reflection on the art of living by yours truly and my co-writer and translator, Stephen
Hanselman. I actually do this journal every single day. There's a question in the morning,
a question in the afternoon,
and there's these sort of weekly meditations.
As Epictetus says, every day and night,
we keep thoughts like this at hand,
write them, read them aloud, and talk to yourself,
and others about them.
You can check out the Daily Stoke Journal,
anywhere a book's a sold,
you can also get a signed personalized copy from me
in the Daily Stoke store,
it's store.dailystoke.com.
Senaqa says, we're all the geniuses of history to focus on a single theme
that could never fully express their bafflement to darkness,
to human mind.
No person would give even an inch of their estate
and the slightest dispute with a neighbor can mean hell to pay,
yet we easily let others encroach on our lives worse.
We often pave the way for those who will take it over.
No person would hand out their money to a passerby, our lives worse, we often pave the way for those who will take it over.
No person would hand out their money to a passerby, but how many of us, but how many of us
hand out our lives.
We're tight-fisted with our property and money, and yet we think too little of wasting time,
the one thing we should all be the toughest risers about, that's Santa-Cut on the shortness
of life. It is not that we all have too short a time to live,
Santa says, but that we squander a great deal of it.
Life is long enough, and it's given
a sufficient measure to do many great things
if we spend it well.
But when it's poured down the drain of luxury and neglect,
when it's employed to no good end,
we're finally driven,
we're finally driven to see that it is passed by without us even recognizing its passing.
So it is, we don't receive short life. We make it so. Or as I've also heard it rendered
by Santa Claus, it's not that life is short. It's that we waste a lot of it.
And this all comes from his wonderful essay on the shortness of life, which you should absolutely
read. It's a very powerful essay. It's worth rereading a couple of times a year to be quite frank.
But I was thinking about this recently. I'd serve two good examples. Number one, I'm trying to
get this television delivered. And anyone who's been trying to buy furniture,
or televisions, or anything recently knows just how messed up
the supply chains and logistics are.
But anyways, it was supposed to come,
and then it didn't come, so I messaged the people,
and then it was supposed to come the next day,
so I messaged the people,
and then they were supposed to mess it.
And then again, then I had to contact Amazon about it,
and then they said they were gonna do it,
but I got past her.
Anyways, I'm spending time out for time,
and then at some point,
someone promised me a $200 credit on this TV,
which is, you know, I'm free $200, not bad.
But it occurred to me that one had already objectively
spent more than $200 of my time on this
thing, like if what an hour of my time is worth.
But also if you just asked me, hey, would you spend $200 more on the TV and not have to
go through this, I would have taken that option as well.
And I had to wrestle with how much energy am I going to spend trying
to get this $200 credit that may or may not ever exist, the TV from these people may or may
not ever go to the door to chase down.
And so of course, if someone stole $200 from me, I'd be very upset, right?
If they'd overcharged me $200 from this TV, I'd have been upset.
But I'm willing to spend $200 of my time to either get this credit or get this TV, right? If they'd overcharged me $200 in this TV, I'd have been upset. But I'm willing to spend $200 of my time to either get this credit or get this TV, right? And that's what we do. We
waste our time. We value money and property, Asenaka is saying. But time is this like thing that we
assume we have an unlimited amount of because no one, I don't know, it's just crazy. And then I think about this
with the bookstore, which I love and I'm so proud of, but people come by and they want to say hi.
And I think sometimes people think it's rude that I won't run downstairs to see everyone
that's here. And I can't do that, right? Because not only do I have work, but if I did that for every single person,
I would never have time.
I'd use up all my time.
I could spend almost the entire day doing that.
And so in Santa can talk about being a miser,
a miser, if you're not familiar with that word,
miseries like someone who's tight-fisted with money.
It's like a cheap person.
But he's saying, you have to be cheap with your time.
You can't give it away.
Yes, you should be kind and treat people well,
and not be rude about it, and not be self-absorbed.
But you have to be a bit of a miser with your time
because you're going to have to hurt people's feelings
or not give them everything they want.
When you say no, you're going to have to say no sometimes.
That's not fun.
But I always try to remind myself who, when I'm saying no to one person, I am also saying
yes to something else and conversely when I'm saying yes to some inquiry, I'm also saying
no to someone or something else. And conversely, when I'm saying yes to some inquiry, I'm also saying no to someone or
something else, right?
And that's just the struggle that we're on.
And if you have kids, if you have a spouse, if you have work that's important, if you have
potential, you're trying to fulfill, if you're just trying to get better at yourself, it's
going to mean being tight-fisted with your time.
It's going to mean saying no to people.
And that's just how it goes.
That's just how it goes.
And so I would urge everyone to take a minute value,
try to think about what an hour of your time is worth, right?
Try to think about things that you can take
off your plates and get that time back.
But then think about what you are frivolously spending your time on and if that's worth it.
What are the wrote tasks, the things that you do, the things that you go, you put off and
you dread doing them?
What are those things?
Why are you still doing them?
Do you need to be doing them?
And at the end of your life, when you go, man, that flew
by. I wish I had just one more day to do X, one more hour to do X, right? Are you going to
look back and be like, well, I am, I am glad that I spent X many hours doing this. Think about
your commute, right? How many hours you're going to spend doing that? Think about how
many hours you spend in meetings. Think about how many hours you spend on ridiculous trivialities,
right? I think what I like to point out, what Senna has think about neighbors is like,
yeah, if your neighbors encroached on your property, you would object. But if your neighbor came over,
just wanted a gossip about nonsense, you would indulge that, right? And that's not a good idea. You have to be miserly with
your time. Not selfish, not not not cruel, not indifferent to other people's time, of
course, but but a bit miserly with your own time. And be stingy with it, as they said. And
I'll cut this episode short so I'm not not
taking up too much of your time but you get the point. Thanks so much for
listening to the Daily Stoke Podcast. Again if you don't know this you can get
these delivered to you via email every day just go to dailystoke.com slash email
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