The Daily Stoic - 21 (Stoic) Quotes That Will Change You Into A Better Person
Episode Date: January 30, 2022Ryan gives you 21 quotes that will change you into a better person, if you let them. Each one is worth remembering, having queued in your brain for one of life’s crossroads or to drop at th...e perfect moment in conversation. Watch the video: https://youtu.be/pHtgQDqXqVoTalkspace is an online and mobile therapy company. Make your mental health more than just another New Year’s resolution, with Talkspace. Visit talkspace.com and get $100 off your first month when you use promo code STOIC at sign-up. That’s $100 off at talkspace.com, promo code STOIC.Sign up for the Daily Stoic email: https://DailySto ic.com/dailyemailCheck 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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Welcome to the weekend edition of the Daily Stoic. Each weekday we bring you a meditation inspired by the ancient Stoics,
something to help you live up to those four Stoic virtues of courage, justice, temperance, and wisdom. And then here on
the weekend, we take a deeper dive into those same topics. We interview stoic philosophers, we
explore at length how these stoic ideas can be applied to our actual lives and the challenging
issues of our time. Here on the weekend when you have a little
bit more space when things have slowed down, be sure to take some time to think, to go
for a walk, to sit with your journal and most importantly to prepare for what the week
ahead may bring.
As long as we've been alive, we've been collecting sayings about how to live.
You can find them carved into the rocks of the temple of Apollo.
They're etched.
It's graffiti on the walls of Pompeii as it happens.
There's a quote from Seneca on a wall in Pompeii.
There's proverbs and epigrams in the plays of Shakespeare and the commonplace books
of great thinkers and writers like Erasmus.
Montagne would put some of his favorite expressions on the ceiling of his study.
There's an epictetus quote as it happens.
Maybe today you put yours in your iPhone or an ever note.
I put mine on note cards.
But the idea is we want to gather up these little sayings that guide us on how to live.
Well, in today's episode, we have 21 quotes
that I think will make you a better person.
Quotes I've written down, put in my commonplace book
that I try to think of often.
And I think you'll like this little conversation.
I was excited to put this episode done.
We have an article form of it as well
in a YouTube video video which you can
check out in the show notes. But there's 21 stoic inspired quotes that will change you into a better
person if you like.
Data Roosevelt said that we all must either wear out or rust out. My choice is to wear out.
I think it's this idea that, you know, use it or lose it, right?
No one would have thought early on his life
that Deo Roosevelt would have even been in a position
to rust out, because he was born with this crippling case
of asthma, and he was sickly and frail.
He basically realizes his father tells me as a young man,
look, it doesn't matter how smart you are
if you don't have the body to go with it.
And he decides that he only gets one life, and he's not going to spend it sitting around being frail, being weak, not being able to do things.
And so he gets to work building his bodies, his father puts a gym in their house.
There's no one who looks at the life of this man, his cowboy days, his writing days, his time as president, his time after the presidency. Nobody looks at this guy's life and says he wasted it, right?
Nobody says that he left anything on the table.
When I think about resting out or wearing out, I just think about season the day, not waiting
for some future when you're going to do something, but getting to work, doing what you can,
resting at the end, not in the middle, don't defer to later, put in the work now.
Epic Titus says it's not what happens to you, but how you react to it that matters. To me,
this is the essence of stoicism. It's not what happens, it's how we respond to what happens.
And I think the stokes are so good at encapsulating this complicated
philosophy in such a distilled, key way. It's not what happens how you respond. I have another video
about this, this idea that you control how you play. What the refs do, how the weather is, how
you're feeling, where the coach decides to position you. You don't control any of that, you control
how you play. We don't control what happens to us in life. We control what we do
about what happens to us in life. That's where our power is. That's what's up to us.
Marcus really says the best revenge is to not be like that. And he says this as a guy who
experiences a coup, who's slandered, who all sorts of bad things happen to.
And so what's he gonna do?
Is he going to debase himself by being like the people
who did wrong to him?
Or is he gonna be above it?
Is he going to stick to his principles?
Because what the Stoics believe is that the people who do wrong,
even if they are rewarded for it in some ways,
are ultimately punished by it.
Think of the worst people you know, the people who have screwed you over the most in life.
Ask yourself, would you really want to live inside them?
Would you really want to be them?
No, you wouldn't.
You know deep down it's miserable to be them.
And you know that you could get away with the things that they do, but that's not why
you don't do them.
You don't do them because you know it would degrade you.
It would make you worse.
That's what Marcus really means when he says,
the best revenge is to not be like that.
And I try to remember this always,
when I'm going through things, when I'm attacked,
somebody screws me over, good look,
I got to deal with this,
I got to figure out my way through it,
but what I'm not going to do is to base myself in response to it.
And that goes back to the epic twist
and we don't control what happens,
we control how we respond,
and we don't want that response
to make us worse as people.
There is good in everything
if only we look for it.
Laura Ingalls, while there is an incredibly difficult life,
she's a pioneer in Florida, in the Midwest,
on the prairies.
She deals with the worst things that nature can throw
to person.
As the stoic say, our life is dyed by the color of our thoughts.
Are we going to choose to see the good in a situation?
Are we going to choose to see what we can respond with?
Are we going to see where we have an opportunity?
Are we going to focus on the things that we're taken from us? are we going to see where we have an opportunity, or we're
going to focus on the things that we're taking from us, or we're going to focus on the
negativity, or we're going to focus on the pain, or we're going to focus on what we're
going to do about it.
And the first thing we can do about it is to see some level of positivity.
The stokes believe that the wise person could find good and anything, could turn anything
into some kind of good.
That's what this idea means.
Herocletus says that character is fate.
And what that means is who you are determines
what you're gonna do.
The traits you nurture, the code you live by,
the things you hold to be important.
That's what you can bet on
and it's also what other people are gonna bet on.
To me, the other part of character is fate,
is just remembering, as the Stokes say,
you don't go expecting figs in winter,
if someone has shown you what their character is,
who they are, you have to believe them.
Don't expect that they're magically gonna change,
don't expect that you're gonna be the exception
as far as interacting with them goes.
What you see is what you get. So what that means is not that you write other people off,
but I think it's that you focus on cultivating and improving your character.
So people see what they're going to get when it comes to you, and what you know you're going to get
when it comes to yourself.
going to get when it comes to yourself. The scene to live is one of my favorite writers. If you haven't read the Black Swan or
anti-fragile or by randomness you absolutely should. But he says, if you see fraud and do
not say fraud, you are a fraud. Meaning that if you see something that's wrong in the world,
if you see something that's not true, if you see someone being abused, if you see something that's wrong in the world if you see something that's not true
If you see someone being abused if you see someone doing something unethical and you simply look the other way
You are part of the problem you are guilty as well in meditations
Mark is to realize is and remember you can commit and injustice by doing nothing also
You can be corrupted by you can be
complicit in an evil happening by not saying anything.
And I love this quote because it cultivates an important stoke idea.
So this isn't just knowing what's right, but it's speaking up and doing what's right.
And so if you see something that's wrong in the world, you have to speak up.
There's been times that I haven't done this in my life.
I talked about this in Courageous Claw, And I look back at that with great shame and embarrassment.
The things I'm most proud of, even though they cost me, even though they were hard, are
the times that I saw something was wrong and I did something about it.
If you see fraud and do not say fraud, you are a fraud.
How does Ralph Waldo Emerson get so smart?
It's by learning from everyone that he meets.
And his quote is a great one and I think it's a worthy motto.
He says, every man I meet is my master in something.
And in that, I learn from him.
Right?
So, everyone is better than you at something.
We can learn from every single person we meet.
If you go around thinking that you're superior, if you go around thinking that you're perfect, if you go around thinking
you're better than everyone, you will not learn. That's not to say that someone is
better than you at the things you value, right? That's not to say they're better
than you at all the most important things, but there is something that they are
better than you at. And that's what you want to find. You want to look for that.
You want to learn from everyone, from everything.
This is how you get better, right?
The person who is always learning is always getting better.
The person who thinks there's nothing left to learn
is in a sense correct,
because it becomes impossible for them to learn anymore.
I love Cheryl Stray.
She's a great writer.
She says all sorts of brilliant things. If you haven't read her book,
do your show there, you absolutely should. And one of the letters in that book, she says, look, this isn't your
responsibility, but it is your problem. I remember when I was learning to drive and I started to go through some
intersection and then another car went and I remember telling my dad or the driving instructor, I forget who it was,
I remember saying something like, but I have the right way. And they said to me,
it doesn't matter who has the right way
if you get in an accident.
Meaning, it doesn't matter who's right,
it's still your problem.
And I think that's what she's saying here.
So when we think about who's to blame,
we love blaming, right?
We love pointing fingers.
But it doesn't matter
because now it's something you have to deal with.
And I think this is kind of a metaphor for life.
So the question is, what are you going to do? Are you going to complain? Are you
going to litigate the blame? Are you going to wish it was otherwise? Are you going to
resent it? Or are you going to get to work solving it? So don't worry about who's
responsibility it was. Don't worry about who to blame. Just solve it.
just solve it. Mark Siviris says, let's waste no more time arguing what a good person is just B1. Right? Philosophy does ask a lot of provocative questions. It
can be easy to get caught up in debates about right or wrong. It can be easy to
get distracted with just theoretical debates about whether there is such a thing
as right or wrong.
But ultimately, still, it just takes action.
Show, don't tell.
So you can spend a lot of time talking, spend a lot of time shattering, you can spend a lot
of time trying to convince, or you could just embody, you could just be it.
And again, what do you control?
You control definitions, or you control your own actions?
So just try to be the thing that you want to see
in the world as that quote goes.
Don't try to reform other people.
Don't try to convince other people.
Try to reform yourself.
Try to be what you want to be in the world.
Try to focus on what you control.
In the bag of I'm Gita, one of my favorite quotes, and something I try to think always of as
a writer is this idea that your only entitled to the action never to its fruits.
I control the book that I write, I control the work that I put into the book.
I control even the effort that I spend marketing, but how many copies it sells, what awards it
wins, the recognition that it gets, it's how many copies it sells, what awards it wins,
the recognition that it gets, it's appreciated now or appreciated a hundred years from now or never.
None of that you control. And when you detach your interests from what you don't control,
it actually gives you more energy and a deeper love for what it is that you do. So as a writer,
I'm trying always to focus on what's up to
me. I'm trying to focus on process, not outcomes. And I think you really find this in great people
that they are far more concerned with process than they are with outcomes, because that's what they
control. Epicurus is seen as this sort of lover of pleasure, but that's not really what it was.
I think his ethos is best captured in his quote when he says, self-sufficiency is the
greatest of all wealth.
People talk about this idea of fuck you money.
One day in the future, I have so much I won't have to care about anything, but really it's
about meeting your needs.
When your needs are met, then you're playing with house money. And I think that's what self-sufficiency is about.
Getting the things that you need,
not being dependent on external things, not needing more.
And in fact, for the still, it's the definition of poverty
was in a certain amount of money.
It was the need to craving for more and more
that made someone truly impoverished.
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Jose Ortegas says, tell me what you pay attention to,
and I will tell you who you are.
Gertha has a similar version. He says, tell me who you spend time with,
and I will tell you who you are. Right? We are what we put our mind towards.
We are dyed by the color of our thoughts. We are shaped by our inputs.
So if you watch divisive television, you're going to be divisive and polarized. I think most
people have a toxic unhealthy media diet worse than their actual diet. Then we wonder why they're
unhappy, why they're easily misinformed, why they get riled up, why they're angry. This is just no way to live.
Zinos is better to trip with the feet than with the tongue. You can get back up after you've fallen.
You cannot unsay what has been said.
So I think part of the reason the stoics are quiet
why they always say less than necessary
to use Robert's term is that they don't want to say
the wrong thing.
They'd rather be quiet and be thought stupid as the expression goes, then open their mouths and remove all doubt. The self-control required to just not voice every dumb opinion that you have to
not blurt out a thought two seconds after you have it. This is important. When I think about what
I've said on social media, the stuff I regret the most
is the stuff that I said in the heat of the moment, not the stuff that was planned, right?
Not the stuff that came out of a reasoned discussion. And I think that will be true for you. So,
step back, think about it, don't rush into it, and you will not only be happier and more successful,
you will do less than you are embarrassed by.
more successful, you will do less that you are embarrassed by. Napoleon said, space I can recover time never.
Robert Green talks about this in the 33 Strags of War.
He says, trade space for time.
Time is the most valuable thing.
Time to think.
Time to plan.
Time to regroup.
Time to prioritize.
This is all really important.
If you're only thinking about moving ahead, if you're unable to ever back up, if you're
unable to change directions, if you're unable to give up a game, you will not be successful.
You can't go back in time and prepare more for something you should have prepared for.
Napoleon was really brilliant at trading space for time.
And I think we're so bad at this, we don't value time.
We have to remember what Santa Cusette said,
that time is our most precious resource,
and that we spend the thing that we can never get back
the most frivolously, and the things we purchase for it
are some of the least valuable things.
Warren Buffett says, you never know who's swimming until the time goes out.
I think one of the things I take from the Stokes is the idea of preparing for reversals in fortune, understanding that these reversals in fortune are inevitable
and that to take the status quo for granted to live
outside your means to live recklessly to assume things are always going to be
this way or always going to get better is naive and misleading. But you have to
understand that most people unfortunately do live that way and so if you go
around comparing yourself to those people or you let them quick in your pace
because you think you have to keep up with
them.
It's like it's screwing with your compass.
And it's only going to be in the midst of a market correction or a bit of adversity or
some change that you're going to realize that these were really bad people to mark yourself
against.
That these were really bad people to let screw with your compass.
If you know you're making good solid decisions that you're living within your means, that
you're valuing what's important, that's enough. Don't focus on what other people are doing.
Don't let them distract you. Run the race that you're on. You know, don't swim naked because the tide
will go out. Benjamin Franklin says that we search others for their virtues and we search
ourselves for our vices. Mark's really says something similar, says, tolerant with
others, strict with yourself. And from what we understand from Mark's
really, he lives by this. He manages to find, as Franklin says, virtues in flawed
people, puts them to work in service of the empire. His strictness is contained to himself, as one biographer says.
But everyone else, he tries to find a way to work with.
He tries to put them to good use.
And that's what I want you to do.
Stoicism is not a philosophy for judging other people,
for holding them to your standards.
It's called self-discipline.
What's the standard you're holding yourself to? That's what matters.
The poet Juvenile says that the world was not big enough for Alexander the Great,
but a coffin was. His point was that for all of Alexander the Great's insatiable need to conquest,
All of Alexander, the great's, insatiable need to conquest.
All of his accomplishments, that the whole world was not enough for him.
In the end, like the rest of us,
he was buried in a coffin.
And this is just, I think a really important reminder
that one, you can't take any of this stuff
with you when you die.
But two, that none of us are immortal. None of us are more important than anyone else.
Right? Memento Mori, Visto Xe, none of us are exempt from this great equalizer of death.
And we should think about that constantly because it puts everything, at least for me, in perspective.
Churchell says that to improve is to change and so to be perfect is to change often. I think the point is that you can't fear change because all improvement comes from change.
And if you are afraid of change, you will not get better, right?
Everything you have gotten better at in your life, every good thing in fact
that's ever happened in your life has come from change. And yet what is the thing we all
fear the most with your change? It's ridiculous. If you look back at an earlier version of yourself
and you're exactly the same as that person, that should embarrass you. That's humiliating.
That means you're not getting better. It certainly means you're not perfect. So we should
embrace change. All good things come from change. Do bad things come from change,
of course. But we shouldn't fear change because change is how we get better.
Judge not lest you be judged. This comes from the Bible. I think it's most beautifully expressed
in Lincoln's second inaugural when he's trying to speak about binding America back together.
He goes, look, obviously slavery is horrible.
Obviously, one has to have blinded themselves and contorted themselves into this same position to think that slavery was ever okay.
But look, let's judge not must we be judged.
There are plenty of things we're a guilty of.
There's plenty of ways we were complicit in what those other people are guilty of.
Try not to judge, be understanding,
try to leave other people's mistakes to their maker,
as Marcus really says, and focus on where you can improve.
Santa Cahouse, actually born the same year as Jesus,
says that you look at pimples on others
when you yourself are covered in sores, right? This also goes to this Christian idea of why point out the splinter in
your neighbor's eye when there's a log in your own. Focus on your mistakes. Don't
judge. Leave other people to their own things. Focus on where you can get
better.
In Warren Peace, Tolstoy has this quote that,
"'Time in Patience are the strongest warriors.'"
My book, Conspiracy, I talk about this 10-year campaign
of Peter Teal to destroy a website that he thought
was ruining American culture.
The idea that this would have been done in some foul swoop,
that this would have been done in a single swoop, that this would have been done in a single brilliant maneuver.
That's not how it works.
Almost all great things are the result of a lot of time,
a lot of patience.
Talked about Warren Buffett earlier.
How does Warren Buffett become one of the richest people
in the world by value investing,
which means investing and holding for a long period of time,
letting time work on the money,
let compounding interest work for you.
So we want things fast, we want them quickly,
but this is to cut out two of the most important allies
in the world of time and patience.
Everything comes to him who knows how to wait,
as Tolstoy says, if you're rushing,
if you're impatient, you will not be as successful as you can be.
This is a stoic idea of temperance, self-discipline.
Have to be patient, have to wait.
Good things come to those who wait.
I know that we typically talk about stoicism here,
but I thought I'd end with a quote from Buddha
because it's such a good one.
He says, no one saves us but ourselves, no one can, and no one may. You have to get active in your own
rescue, as the stoic say, as do the Buddhists. It's your responsibility. It's on you. Blow your own
nose, as Epictetus says. No one's coming to save you. There is no magical solution. There's just hard work. It's time and patience.
But most of all your own effort focusing on the response, focusing on what's in your control,
remembering that you are mortal, choosing not to rust out, but to wear out, get to work,
get moving. You can watch videos like this all day,
you can read all the books in the world,
but at some point you gotta put it down,
you gotta get up from the computer,
and you gotta go to work.
You gotta do what you know you have to do.
That's how you get better, that's how you improve.
And that's what I want the final thought to leave you with
today on this video.
Now that you've had these quotes,
and I hope you write them down,
I hope you put them on the wall.
But at the end of the day, we gotta follow follow up on Mark's really says it's not just talk
about it but be about it. If you want to learn more about stoic philosophy totally for free you can
sign up for a daily stoic email it's one free email every morning the best of stoic wisdom daily stoke.com slash email.
Hey, prime members, you can listen to the daily stoke 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.
Celebrity feuds are high stakes. You never know if you're just going to end up on Page Six or Du Moir or in court.
I'm Matt Bellesai.
And I'm Sydney Battle, and we're the host of Wonder E's new podcast, Disantel, where
each episode we unpack a different iconic celebrity feud.
From the build up, why it happened, and the repercussions.
What does our obsession with these feuds say about us?
The first season is packed with some pretty messy pop culture drama, but none is drawn out in
personal as Britney and Jamie Lynn Spears. When Britney's fans formed the free Britney movement
dedicated to fraying her from the infamous conservatorship, Jamie Lynn's lack of public support
it angered some fans, a lot of them. It's a story of two young women who had their choices taken
away from them by their controlling
parents, but took their anger out on each other.
And it's about a movement to save a superstar, which set its sights upon anyone who failed
to fight for Brittany.
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