The Daily Stoic - You Will Fight This Battle All Alone | What Expensive Things Cost
Episode Date: March 8, 2021“It would be wonderful we were aligned on this. It would be nice if the world was your ally, that it was green lights all the way—for your diet, for your sobriety, for the path to virtue.... But it isn’t.”Ryan discusses the individual battle that we all face, and reads this week’s meditation from The Daily Stoic Journal, on today’s Daily Stoic Podcast.This episode is also brought to you by Athletic Greens. Athletic Greens is a custom formulation of 75 vitamins, minerals, and other whole-food sourced ingredients that make it easier for you to maintain nutrition in just a single scoop. It tastes great and gets you the nutrients you need, whether you're working on the go, fueling an active lifestyle, or just maintaining your good health. Visit athleticgreens.com/stoic to get a FREE year supply of Liquid Vitamin D + 5 FREE Travel Packs with subscription.***If you enjoyed this week’s podcast, we’d love for you to leave a review on Apple Podcasts. It helps with our visibility, and the more people listen to the podcast, the more we can invest into it and make it even better.Sign up for the Daily Stoic email: http://DailyStoic.com/signupFollow Daily Stoic:Twitter: https://twitter.com/dailystoicInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/dailystoic/Facebook: http://facebook.com/dailystoicYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/dailystoicSee 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 Stoke podcast. Each day we bring you a meditation inspired by the ancient Stokes illustrative stories from history,
current events and literature to help you be better at what you do.
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You will fight this battle all alone.
It would be wonderful if we were all aligned on this.
It would be wonderful if the world was your ally, that it was green lights all the way for
your diet, for your sobriety, for your path to virtue.
But it isn't.
In fact, it's the opposite.
There are temptations.
There are those people that Marcus really has talked about, the arrogant, the dishonest,
the jealous, the mean, who you will face from the moment you arise
in the morning till you go to bed at night.
We're still, what we know to be good in the long term
is often punished in the short term
and what is bad in the long term
is often rewarded in the short term.
But isn't that what makes getting it right
so beautiful, Kato's stand during the fall
of the Republic wouldn't be so powerful if everyone had been on his side.
Marcus Arellius wouldn't be so impressive
if every king had been a philosopher
and if every philosopher was a king.
No, that this is hard, that it's rare,
that the world is not set up to encourage
what we're trying to do that makes it special.
We are fighting this battle all alone
against resistance, against the current,
against the movement of the mob and the status quo. No matter we will keep fighting, we will grow
stronger for pushing against it. We will stand out because of it."
What expensive things cost? From the cynics, the Stoics learned the powerful practice of focusing on the true
worth of things. That the cost of an item isn't simply what it's sold for, but what it
costs the owner to own. So much of our desire for material goods comes at the great price
of both anxiety and the loss of our serenity. And even when gained, these things often leave
us more anxious and less serene.
So today, spend some time reflecting on what the things you buy actually cost you and see
if they are really worth what you have been paying. And that's from today's entry in
the Daily Stoke Journal. We have some quotes from Seneca and EpicT this year. So concerning
the things we pursue and for what we vigorously exert ourselves,
we owe this consideration.
Either there is nothing useful in them
or most aren't useful.
Some of them are superfluous,
while others aren't worth that much.
But we don't discern this and see them as free
when they cost us so dearly.
That's Seneca's moral letters.
Then we have Epictetus. If a person
gave your body away to some passer-by, you'd be furious, yet you hand over your mind to anyone
who comes along so that they may abuse you, leaving it disturbed and troubled. Have you no shame,
Epictetus asks. And then we have Diogeny's laertis, quoting Diogeny's of Synope. That's Diogeny's the Synic.
He says, we sell things of great value for things, very little, and vice versa.
You know, they say the best things in life are free.
And that's not really true, but I would say that a lot of things are much more expensive
than they appear, right?
So we chase these things, we want these things, we want a fancy car, and then we're worried
about making sure nothing happens to that fancy car.
Remember a few years ago I put new floors at my house, and on the one hand I hated the
old floors, and it made the house look better, and they were easier to walk on and improve my life.
But then we had kids and now all of a sudden there's this part of me that worries about the floors
all the time, right? I don't want them to get scratched. I don't want water to sit on them.
The dog went to the bathroom and so this thing that cost me money, it was not cheap to put new floors in the house. Didn't just cost what it cost.
It cost all the anxiety.
It cost the arguments between me and my wife about who's to blame
for this scratch on the floor from the couch.
It cost goodwill between me and my kid,
because I'm like, hey, why did you spell that part of you
that just blurt's out trying to protect things?
And the truth is it really doesn't matter.
I remember I was talking to a therapist about some version of this and she said, just
write it off.
Like write it off in your head.
You spend the money.
It's gone.
You can't try to keep it all together, right?
You can't try to keep it pristine.
It's like the people who buy a toy
and then they want it in mint condition. I mean, this is, this is not just a violation of the law of
entropy. It's a violation of the law of happiness. You will not be happy if this is how you're spending
all your time trying to keep everything in one place, trying to keep them together. It's an illusion.
It will not last. You cannot do it.
You have to be able to let go.
That's the old Zen saying that, you know,
the cup is already broken.
The cup is already broken.
The Stoics knew that expensive things
cost even more than their price tag.
That's why there's the great story of Epic Titus.
He has this lamp.
It's stolen.
In the next day, he says,
I'm gonna go get a cheaper lamp,
so I don't have to worry about it getting stolen ever again,
and I don't have to be sad that it's missing ever again.
So for the Stoics, remember,
it's not just what actually is valuable and isn't.
You know, a lot of times we describe value to things
that are superficial and meaningless and pointless,
but also it's realizing that you are spending even more money than you think
on things and you're spending, you're spending your happiness is really what you're spending
on.
So I want to leave you with that thought.
It's not that you live in a pigstime, you don't care about anything.
You should try to keep your things nice and not unnecessarily wear them down, but you also
cannot resist entropy. You cannot resist time. You cannot
resist wear and tear. And if you do so, it comes at the expense. The most important thing, which is
time and the other most important thing, which is your happiness and the other most important thing,
which is the relationships, the people in your life. So you only have so much time to think or
worry or spend time on things. Are you going to spend it trying to preserve your floors? You're not even going to live there forever? You're probably going to tear
them out at some point anyway? No. Focus on what matters.
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I'll see you next episode.
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