The Daily Stoic - You Struggle With This Everyday | Looking Out For Each Other
Episode Date: October 6, 2022Epictetus said that to live a good life, you have to make good choices. You are what your choices make you, nothing more and nothing less.📕 Ryan Holiday's new book "Discipline Is Destiny" ...is out now! We’ve extended the pre-order bonuses for the next week—among them is a signed and numbered page from the original manuscript of the book. You can learn more about those and how to receive them over at Dailystoic.com/preorder. ✉️ Want Stoic wisdom delivered to your inbox daily? Sign up for the FREE Daily Stoic email at https://dailystoic.com/dailyemail📱 Follow us: Instagram, Twitter, YouTube, TikTok, and Facebook 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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Hey, prime members, you can listen to the Daily Stoic podcast early and add free on Amazon Music.
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Welcome to another episode of the Daily Stoic podcast.
On Thursdays, we do double duty, not just reading our daily meditation,
but also reading a passage from the book, The Daily Stoic, 366 Meditations on Wisdom, Perseverance,
in the art of living, which I wrote with my wonderful co-author and collaborator,
Stephen Hanselman. And so today we'll give you a quick meditation from one of the Stoics,
from Epititus Markus, really, as Seneca, then some analysis for me, and then we send you out into the world to do your best to turn these words into works.
Hi I'm David Brown, the host of Wundery's podcast business wars.
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You struggle with this every day.
Epictetus said that to live a good life,
you have to make good choices.
You are what your choices make you nothing more
and nothing less.
It's simple and it's true. In theory.
In practice, it's really hard.
And that was certainly true in Epictetus's world.
It feels all but impossible in ours because we have smartphones that are designed to be
addictive.
We have food that is genetically engineered to be as irresistible as it is nutrient-deficient.
We have apps that bring us pleasures and distractions with the click.
We have the ability to work from home to wake up and start working whenever we want. We can go wherever we want, do whatever
we want, say whatever we want. We have to struggle in just about every moment of every day
to make good choices. From the moment we first awake, are we going to get up or hit the
snooze, go for a runner back to bed, do the deep work or go down a deep Twitter rabbit
hole, Make ourselves lunch
or order a grub hub. Go to the gym or to Happy Hour. Get a good night's sleep or watch another
episode. It's these small choices that add up to make you, you, you. You are the sum of
one small choice stacked upon one small choice stacked upon one small choice add infinitum.
If your life were a painting, these choices would be the brushstrokes
that compose it. In other words, your life is defined by your choices, by your discipline.
Which is why the new book makes the claim that discipline is destiny. So I can't wait for you
to check out the new book discipline is destiny, the power of self control. The second in my four
virtues series on the cardinal virtues of stoicism,icism, Courage, Discipline, Justice,
Wisdom. The new book is out now. We're still honoring some of the preorder bonuses, which you can
grab at dailystoged.com slash preorder. But you can pick up discipline is destiny, the power
of self control anywhere books are sold. Grab it on audible, you can grab it on Kindle, you can
pick it up at your local indie bookstore. If you want me to sign your copy, you can also do that at dailystodoc.com slash pre-order.
And we even have some signed manuscript pages for people who order five copies, plus
you get a bunch of other bonuses, which I'd love to give you.
So sign up at dailystodoc.com slash discipline.
Looking out for each other.
And this is from this week's entry in the Daily Story of 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 the afternoon, then 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
of books or sold. You can also get a signed personalized copy from me in the Daily Stoke
Store at store.dailystoke.com. It is in keeping with nature to show our friends' affection
and to celebrate their advancement
as if it was our own.
For if we don't do this,
virtue which is strength
and only by exercising our perceptions
will no longer endure in us.
Seneca's moral letters,
109.
Watching other people succeed
is one of the toughest things to do,
especially when we
are not doing well ourselves.
And our hunter-gatherer minds, we suspect that life is a zero-sum game, that for someone
to have more means that we might end up with less.
But like all parts of philosophy, empathy and selflessness are a matter of practice.
As Seneca observed, it's possible to learn to rejoice in all their successes and be moved,
but they're very failure.
This is what a virtuous person does.
They teach themselves to actively cheer for other people,
even in cases where it might have come at their own expense
to put aside jealousy and possessiveness.
You can do that too.
I was actually just talking to someone I work with
where we were talking about the sort of pettiness
of writer writers groups.
And I said, they're all kind of frenemies, right?
They see it as a zero-sum game.
And I said, there's a joke I heard about academia that the reason the knives are so sharp
is because the pie is so small.
If you think of the pie as finite, if you think about life as zero sum, it inherently makes everyone your enemy, right?
It means you're having to get what's yours, which means you're having to get it from them or get it before them as opposed to seeing that how it actually is, how the Stokes want us to see it, which is a collective a whole, an infinite game. I've had to do work, especially as a competitive person, to understand
that the success of another writer has nothing to do with me. It doesn't come at my expense.
It helps me. More people reading is good, right? More people talking about Stoicism is good.
I'm sure there are people that see my, the success of my books as being somehow
limiting to them or unfair or undeserved. Meanwhile, they're benefiting from the rising tide that's
lifting all the boats, right? So you've got to think about how you look at it, but you have to practice,
you have to practice this. Robert Green in his book, The Laws of Human Nature,
he talks about the difference between shodden Freud, like wishing bad things for other people
in mitten Freud, and probably pronouncing this horribly wrong. This is also a day we broke
out in the daily laws, which I was lucky enough to work on if you haven't read you should,
we carried them in the paint of porch. I think we enough to work on if you haven't read you should. We carried in the paint of porch.
I think we even have some signed copies.
Again, I don't...
That there's another awesome daily book out there.
Like, I remember Robert Cohen, is that going to be a problem with your book?
And I was like, no, this is amazing.
More people reading something every day is good for the world and probably good for the
category too.
Anyways, there's also a section of this in the daily laws. But Mittenfroy is the active wishing of success or goodwill towards people.
I heard love once defined as willing the good of the other, like wanting good for the other,
wishing them happiness, wishing them success.
As an author, wishing you the biggest first week sales, you could
possibly have. I want that for you. It doesn't come at my expense. And even if it did, who
will I to root against you? I'm going to do my best. I'm going to put out my best work.
I'm going to go into this already knowing that I'm playing with house money that I've
succeeded beyond my wildest dreams and expectations that I've written something I'm proud of that I think deserves to be read
that I have faith in the long term will do what it needs to do. So there's no pettiness
in me. There's no need for you to do poorly. I just wish everyone success. Are there moments
where I get caught in with a pang of jealousy
or where I might say something that, you know,
if I played it back to myself later,
I'd be like, oh, that's not a good look.
Of course, this is something you have to work on.
It's like ego.
In fact, it's rooted in ego.
So it's something you have to constantly sweep away
and push away, but it gets you to a place
where you are happier and you are better.
It's not just
by wishing other people good, you're making them happy. Theodore Roosevelt is right. Comparison
is the thief of joy. Joseph Epstein is right when he said that, that of all the deadly sins
envy is the only one that's no fun. Living that way sucks. It punishes you most of all.
Meanwhile, not being petty, not wanting to hold other people back, being happy, being
generally celebrating all the things that are good things that are happening to other people
and not seeing them as somehow bad for you.
Well, this is a much happier and much more wonderful way to live.
And I wish that for you.
I wish that for you.
But what I control is whether I try to live and act that way myself,
which I do.
And speaking of which discipline is destiny, the power self control is now out.
This is, I guess, now first full week out in the world.
And I appreciate all the support from all of you.
Thank you so much.
If you haven't picked it up, you can pick it up at dailystoward.com slash preorder. We're honoring the preorder bonuses, sign copies, etc. I hope
you can check that out or you can pick it up anywhere. Books are sold, including there's
an audio book version, which I read. There's an ebook version, physical versions everywhere.
Support your local bookstores. Come get it at the painted porch if you're in central Texas.
But otherwise, thank you all and I hope
you enjoy the book. I'm really really proud of it. Whether it sells a million copies or ten copies,
I know I did my best and I'll leave it to you to decide, but I do appreciate this support and
hope you enjoy the book. You know the Stoics in real life met at what was called the Stoa.
The Stoa, Poquile, the Painted Porch in ancient Athens.
Obviously, we can't all get together in one place because this community is like hundreds
of thousands of people and we couldn't fit in one space.
But we have made a special digital version of the Stoa.
We're calling it Daily Stoic Life.
It's an awesome community.
You can talk about like today's episode.
You can talk about the emails, ask questions.
That's one of my favorite parts is interacting with all
these people who are using stoicism to be better
in their actual real lives.
You get more daily stoke meditations over the weekend,
just for the daily stoke life members, quarterly Q&As
with me, cloth bound addition of our best of meditations,
plus a whole bunch of other stuff, including discounts, and this is the best part.
All our daily stoke courses and challenges, totally for free, hundreds of dollars of value
every single year, including our new year, new you challenge.
We'd love to have you join us.
There's a two week trial, totally for free.
Check it out at dailystokelife.com. up.
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