The Daily Stoic - You Have To Know Where You’re Going | No Blame, Just Focus
Episode Date: August 4, 2023We know we want to go somewhere. We want to do something. We want to be successful. We want to win. We know we want to start something–a company, a creative project, a movement.Or perhaps w...e want justice, we want someone to make things right, we want to change and grow. We want to prove people wrong about us. We want to be happy.But what exactly? How? What does that success actually look like? What is this happiness we speak of? Well there, we have a lot less clarity.Law 29 of The 48 Laws of Power is: Plan All The Way To The End.---And with today's Daily Stoic reading, Ryan shares why it can be life-changing for you to eradicate blame from your mindset.🗣 You can catch Robert Greene and Ryan Holiday at two live events this fall: Strategy And Philosophy For Turbulent Times. Together the best-selling author’s videos have received millions of views touching on a wide-range of topics–from apprenticeships to cutting-edge technologies, to productivity habits, to happiness.Listen to them discuss big ideas and take your questions from the stage in two LIVE conversations in Los Angeles on September 18, and Seattle on September 21. There are a limited number of VIP meet-and-greet tickets available, so grab yours before they sell out!✉️ 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.📱 Follow us: Instagram, Twitter, YouTube, TikTok, 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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Hi, I'm David Brown, the host of Wondery's podcast,
Business Wars.
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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 in 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 Stokes with some analysis from me,
and then we'll send you out into the world to turn these words into works.
You have to know where you're going.
We know we want to go somewhere, we want to do something, we want to be successful, we
want to win, we know we want to start something, whether it's a company or a creative project
or a movement.
Perhaps we want justice, we want someone to make things right, we want to change, we want
to grow, we want to prove people wrong about us, we want to be happy.
But what exactly, or how, what exactly does that success look like?
What is this happiness we speak of?
Well there we have a lot less clarity.
Law 29 of the 48 laws of power in the Great Robert Green is plan all the way to the end.
By the way, he and I are doing some talks together.
I'll tell you about that at the end.
In the law, he says, by planning all the way to the end, you will not be overwhelmed by
circumstances and you will know when to stop.
Gently guide fortune and help determine the future by thinking far ahead.
Seneca actually said something similar many centuries earlier.
He said, if you don't know what port you're sailing to, no wind is favorable.
Having an end in mind is no guarantee that you'll reach it.
No stoic would pretend otherwise, but not having an end in mind is a guarantee that you
won't reach it.
Having conflicting goals, vague hopes, half-baked schemes, this is to set yourself up for failure
for overreach for getting lost.
To the stoics, our false conceptions are are responsible not just for disturbances in the soul, but
for chaotic and dysfunctional lives and operations.
When our efforts are not directed at a cause or purpose, how can we know what to do day
in and day out?
When you haven't gotten really specific and clear about what you want and why, what it
looks like, how could you possibly achieve it?
How will you know what to say no to and what to say yes to?
How will you know when you've had enough, when you've reached your goal, when you've
gotten off track, if you've never defined what these things are?
Just as the four virtues are the compass for a good life, so is good judgment and clear
thinking the first step of getting from here to there.
The reason that the Stoics were trained in logic and rhetoric and critical thinking, why
they trained themselves to master their emotions was so they would not fall into the trap of
poor assumptions, impulsive decisions, and impossible goals.
I feel like Robert trained me and that, that was my apprenticeship under him.
So I'm really excited to announce that he and I are gonna be live on stage together, September 19th and L.A.,
September 21st in Seattle at the Ebel Theater in L.A.,
at the Moore Theater in Seattle.
It's gonna be awesome.
There's some VIP meet and greet tickets
if you want us to sign your books.
You can ask us questions.
We'll do an audience, Q and A, for sure.
He and I are gonna be going back and forth
like we have many many times but it's going to be live in awesome venues. I'm really excited about we're supposed to do it in San Francisco. Plan's got messed up. We're rescheduling the show in
Seattle. So if you bought tickets, it'll be good for that show. You can grab tickets at ryanholiday.net
or just pull it up on ticket master.
I'll link to it in today's show notes.
I'm really excited.
Me and Robert Green on stage together and then you in the audience.
Hopefully people flew in.
People are flying in from all over.
I've gotten a bunch of emails about it.
Should be really, really exciting.
I will see you and Robert Green in Seattle or Los Angeles, the 19th and the 21st of September.
Talk soon. But the new podcast Sports Explains the World brings you some of the wildest and most surprising
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No blame, just focus. This is today's entry August 4th in the Daily Stoic.
You must stop blaming God and not blame any person.
You must completely control your desire and shift your avoidance to what lies within you, your reasoned choice.
You must no longer feel anger, resentment, envy, or regret.
Epictetus is discourses, 322. Nelson Mandela was in prison for resistance
to the brutal apartheid regime in South Africa for 27 years. For 18 of those years he had a bucket
for a toilet, a hard-caught and a small cell, and once a year he was allowed a single visitor
for 30 minutes. It was vicious treatment meant to isolate and break down the prisoners.
And yet in spite of that, Mandela became a figure of dignity within the prison.
Though he was deprived of many things, he still found creative ways to assert his will.
As one of his fellow prisoners, Neville Alexander explained to Frontline,
Mandela always made the point if they say you must run and cyst on walking.
If they say you must walk fast and cyst on walking slowly, that was the whole point we are going to set the terms.
He pretended to jump rope in shadow box to stay in shape.
He held his head higher than the other prisoners encouraged them when times were tough and always
retained his sense of self assurance.
That self assurance is yours to claim as well, no matter what happens today, no matter
where you find yourself,
shift to what lies within your reasoned choice,
ignore as best you can the emotions that pop up,
which would be so easy to distract yourself with.
Don't get emotional, get focused.
What I always find so amazing about the stories of
Annelson Mandela, Ruben Hurricane Carter,
a epictetus, a James Stockdale, is not only how they
managed to comport themselves, the dignity and poise and resistance and fortitude they
underwent in the prison, which was incredible and a feat of human survival.
But as I get older and I've experienced things that have been
slighted or wronged, frustrated, I'm even more impressed with how they behaved after the
forgiveness that they offered, the lack of resentment or bitterness that they carried, the way
they brought people together, they could have come out of the prison like Bain in Batman,
They could have come out of the prison like Bain in Batman, right?
It could have been the origin of a villain story, right?
But it was the opposite of that. You think even Martin Luther King, you think of the horrible things anyway. You think of Gandhi.
You think of how unjustly they were treated.
How people took things from them.
Years that they would never get back. Time with their family, they would never get back, broke down their bodies in the way that epictetus experienced
in their torture or stockdale experience in their torture.
You think of John McCain not being on the lift as arm a certain way for the rest of his
life.
They would deprive him so much, but they chose not to see it that way.
Hurricane Carter famously doesn't ask for reparations after he leaves prison.
He doesn't even want to admit that that had been taken from him.
He was in control.
And I just think of the incredible poise and strength and pride and all the stowed virtues.
And I'm putting pride in there deliberately.
Like they're they're carriage.
This is who I am. You cannot break me.
I decide. That to me is just the essence of stoicism. I hope none of us are ever tested in such a way
and I hope stock does the only one who tests Epic teetus' theories in the modern world,
in the laboratory, so to speak, at that level. But each of us, we have a period
of an marriage, or we have a bad boss, or we have these periods of our life where we were
subjected to something that we didn't like, and we could be angry about it. We could
sow division afterwards about it. We could get even for it. But instead, we focus on our reason choice. We focus
on being good and decent. We don't hang on to anger or resentment or envy or regret, as
Epic Tita says. But we maintain that dignity. We don't perpetuate the same injustices that
were perpetuated upon us. And we show, as Mark really says, that the best revenge is to
not be like that, to be better, to make a better world, or hopefully something like what we just went through doesn't happen again,
or at the very least doesn't happen because of anything that we say or do.
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