The Daily Stoic - Why Do You Care What They Think?
Episode Date: October 11, 2018There’s a moment that almost everyone remembers from their childhood. They have just received something they really liked--a new shirt, a new toy, a haircut they thought was cool--and showe...d up for school with it...only to be mercilessly teased and mocked for it. Many a trash can has been filled by this experience. The toy, the shirt, the opinion no longer the same now that some jerk has weighed in. If this were simply the naivete of a child, it would be one thing. But the truth is that we carry this attitude with us into adulthood. Even Marcus Aurelius spoke of it. "It never ceases to amaze me,” he said to himself, and now to all of us. “We all love ourselves more than other people, but care about their opinion more than our own."We’re proud of the job we did until our insecure boss attacks us for it. We’re excited about the book or movie or product we’re launching until we read the reviews from the critics. We feel like we’re making progress at the gym until somebody makes a nasty remark. Yet, we never stop to consider whether these people have any credibility, whether they even know what they’re talking about. Suddenly, because they commented about something we care about or are sensitive to, we believe them more than we believe ourselves. And then we are miserable. This is no way to live. The Stoic must cultivate their own high standards, their own strong opinions about what is right and good and important. This is what they need to use to evaluate reality. Other people’s opinions? We need to stop caring about them. Or, at the very least, we cannot give them the power to give us whiplash, to make us miserable, or to question ourselves. It is not their judgment that should be guiding our minds in the quiet of our evening journaling, because it is not their life that we are living.It’s our life. It’s our opinion. That’s what matters.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
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Why do you care what they think?
There's a moment that almost everyone remembers from their childhood.
They have just received something they really liked, a new shirt, a new toy, a haircut they thought was cool,
and showed up for school with it. Only to be mercilessly teased and mocked for it.
Many a trash can has been filled by this experience. The toy, the shirt, the opinion no longer the same
now that some jerk has weighed in. If this were simply the naivete of a child,
that would be one thing. But the truth is that we carry this attitude with us into adulthood.
Even Marcus Aurelia spoke of it. It never ceases to amaze me, he said to himself,
and now to all of us. We love ourselves more than other people, but we care about their opinion
more than our own. We're proud of the job we did until our insecure boss attacks us for it.
We're excited about the book or movie or product
relaunching until we read the reviews from the critics.
We feel like we're making progress at the gym
until somebody makes a nasty remark.
Yet we never stop to consider
whether these people have any credibility,
whether they even know what they're talking about.
Suddenly, because they commented about something
we care about or are sensitive to,
we believe them more than we believe ourselves.
And then we are miserable.
This is no way to live.
The stoic must cultivate their own high standards,
their own strong opinions about what is right
and good and important.
This is what they need to use to evaluate reality.
Other people's opinions, we need to stop caring about them.
Or at the very least, we cannot give them the power to give us whiplash, to make us miserable,
or to question ourselves.
It is not their judgment that should be guiding our minds in the quiet of our evening
journaling because it is not their life that we are living. It's our life. It's our opinion. And that's
what matters.
Hey, Prime Members! You can listen to the Daily Stoic early and ad-free on Amazon Music, download the Amazon
Music App today, or you can listen early and ad-free with Wondery Plus in Apple podcasts.