The Daily Stoic - 25 Essential Rules For Life (From The Stoics)
Episode Date: May 1, 2022It's pretty straight forward: Define your rules. Live by them. “When the standards have been set,” Epictetus said, “the work of philosophy is just this, to examine and uphold the ...standards, but the work of a truly good person is in using those standards when they know them.”But of course, the Stoics were not quite so direct in practice. One Stoic, Chrysippus—supposedly wrote 500 lines a day…the vast majority of which are lost. The Stoics spoke, wrote, debated, but nowhere did they put their “commandments” down in one place. Not at least in any form that survived. Here are 25 rules from the Stoics, gathered from their immense body of work across two thousand years. These rules functioned, then, as now, as guides to what the ancients called “the good life.” Hopefully some of them will illuminate your own path.InsideTracker provides you with a personalized plan to improve your metabolism, reduce stress, improve sleep, and optimize your health for the long haul. For a limited time, get 20% off the entire InsideTracker store. Just go to insidetracker.com/STOIC to claim this deal.Sign up for the Daily Stoic email: https://dailystoic.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.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, prime members, you can listen to the Daily Stoic podcast early and add free on Amazon music. Download the app today.
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.
Hi, I'm David Brown, the host of Wendery's podcast business wars, and in our new season, And may bring.
The great general maddest is we have to find our flat ass rules and stick to them.
Epictetus is that when the standards have been set, the work of philosophy is this,
to examine and uphold the standards.
The work of a truly good person is in using those standards.
Unfortunately, the soaks don't really lay out what those rules are, what those standards
are, as clearly as they would like.
So over the years, I've tried to distill them down into
aphorisms, epigrams, rules to live by. And in today's episode, we're going to review 25
rules from the Stokes. I've done a version of this with 50. We're going to focus on 25. I think
it's a little more manageable. This is 25 rules from the Stokes gathered from their immense
body of work, 2000 years of practice and distillation, and they function then as
now as I think ways to get to the good life, to get to peace and purpose and
meaning and connection and resilience and strength and courage and temperance
justice and wisdom. So that's what we got in today's episode. 25 essential rules
for life from the Stoics for me, Ryan Holiday. Enjoy.
EpicTidus says that every situation has two handles and that's where this rule actually adapted from Thomas Jefferson comes from. He says always grab the smooth handle. EpicTidus says one of the
handles will hold weight the other won't. What handle are you going to grab in this situation?
The one that empowers you or disempowers you. The one that makes you angry or gives you something to focus on and change.
So every situation has two handles, which one are you going to grab?
Grab the one that makes you better, that gives you something to do,
that challenges you, ignore the other handle.
Seneca says every person is an opportunity for kindness, and that's the rule here. Every situation is an opportunity for kindness and that's the rule here.
Every situation is an opportunity for kindness.
Kindness is the key.
It's what moves us forward.
Never pass up an opportunity to be kind, to care, to be compassionate, to listen, to
appreciate what someone is going through because that's the truth.
Everyone is going through something.
This comes to us from Epic Titus, he says,
it's the chief task of light,
which is focus on what you control.
Is it up to me?
Is it not up to me?
If it is up to you, it gets 100%.
If it's not up to me, it gets 0%.
We focus on what we control,
because that's where our energy, effort,
and emotions actually make a difference.
The next one is related to the first one, which is we control how we respond to things.
As EpicTidus says, we don't control what happens, but we control how we respond to what happens.
So by ignoring all the things that are not up to us, by refraining from regret or complaint
or blame and focusing on, this happened, what am I going to do about it?
This is how we move forward and this is what all great leaders, artists,
human beings do. They focus on what they control and what the control is how they
respond to what happens in life.
The next is a question from Mark's Realist. He says, ask yourself in every moment
is this
essential because the truth is most of what we do most of what we spend time on most of
the things that other people do and spend time on are not essential. And he says when
you eliminate what's in essential you get the double benefit of doing the essential things
better. Do I need to do it? Yes or no? And if I do need to do it, then because it is essential,
I'm going to give it everything I have. Are you meditating on your mortality? I carry a coin in my
pocket that says, Memento Mori. You can leave life right now. Mark's really says, life is short,
don't waste time, don't focus on things that don't matter. Going through our life with a clear sense of our mortality is essential.
You have to say no a lot. This goes back to Mark Cerely's. Is this essential?
If it's not essential, what do you do? This is the rule you say no.
You have to say no. When I talk to NFL teams, this is something we talk about. I say look,
everything you say yes to means you're saying no to something else.
And whatever you say no to gives you more room, more time to say yes to what matters. In
their case, being great at what they do. So what are you going to say no to this year?
So you can say yes to the things that matter, to the people that matter in your life as
well. You can't be afraid to ask for help. I don't want you to think that the
stokes are invulnerable that they're they never show weakness. In fact, Mark just
really says, you're like a soldier storming a wall. If you have to weach up and
have a conrad help you out. It's so what? I love this. So what? So don't be afraid to
ask for help. I love the book The Boy, The Fox, The Horse in the Mole by Charlie McCasey who I had on the Daily Stove podcast and he has a great
line in that book. He says, asking for help isn't giving up. It's actually
refusing to give up. Don't be afraid to be vulnerable. Don't be afraid to ask for help.
Dare greatly, as Bernabé Brown says, be vulnerable. Ask for help.
and they Brown says, be vulnerable, ask for help.
What is the path to wisdom? Santa Cus says, it's finding one thing every day,
one quote, one story, one conversation, one book,
one insight, that's the idea.
You get better one thing at a time.
That's actually why we do the daily stoic email, right?
Every single day we sent out a free email
inspired by stoicism to the largest community of stoics ever in the world. Almost 400,000 people get
this email. You can sign up at dailystoke.com slash email. But the point is you got to
find something that delivers value for you every day. You got to seek it out. One thing
that makes you better every day. That's the path to wisdom. We're not in this alone to do harm to another person, to allow harm to come to another person,
to allow harm to come to yourself.
So Marcus really says in this rule, with bad for the hive is bad for the bee.
The way I think about this is whatever I do say, however I live I go, what would the
world look like if everyone did this?
Right?
And if the answer is things would fall apart,
things would be bad,
then it's something I try not to do.
What's bad for others is bad for me.
What's good for me should be good for others.
We talked about being tolerant with others
strict with yourself.
That means not judging.
Seneca says the study of philosophy
is about scrubbing off door flaws, not other peoples, right?
Leave other people to their own mistakes.
Don't judge them, especially people you don't know,
especially people who are going through things
that you don't know about.
Seneca is right, focus on yourself, be strict with yourself,
don't judge other people, leave them to their own struggle.
You have to study the lives of the greats. Sanctus, choose yourself a Cato.
Focus on someone who's gonna make you better,
as I say in my book, The Lives of the Stoics.
We study the lives of the people who went before us
so we can learn easily what they learned with great difficulty.
So we can pick up where they left off,
so we don't have to learn by trial and error.
Find some heroes, study them, learn from them, learn what to do,
but not to do. That's the journey I'm on with Mark's really a
Seneca epitetus. It's what I write about in lives of the Stokes.
But the idea is, whose lives are you studying?
And what are you learning from them?
Forgive, forgive, forgive. That's this rule.
I heard a great expression that forgiveness is a gift that you give to yourself.
Mark's really says the best revenge is not to be like that. I would add to that is also to not hang on to whatever that was.
You gotta let go, you gotta forgive. Yes, Mark's really says that someone's cheating in the ring with you when you're boxing.
You gotta act accordingly, but you can't hold on to grudges
because they make you miserable.
Value time more than money and possessions, right?
You can earn more money, you can get more land, you can get more opportunities, what you
can't get is this moment back.
Seneca says the time that passes belongs to death.
So don't think of death as something in the future.
Think of death as something that's happening right now.
And everything you do, even watching this video, you are choosing to purchase with your life.
You have to remember you're a product of your habits.
Epochita says, if you want to be beautiful, make beautiful choices.
If you want to be excellent, make excellent choices
and make them habitually.
Day in and day out, they add up.
It's easy to get upset by things, which is why the Stoics say that we have the power to have no
opinion. You can just think nothing about something. If you didn't know it existed, you wouldn't have
an opinion. Now that you know it exists, great. But you don't have to say it's positive,
it's negative, you don't have to say it's anything.
It just is.
Seeing things objectively with drawing judgments
from them is really important.
As Epictetus says, it's not things that upset us,
it's our opinion about things, we control our opinions.
Well begun is half done, as they say.
So own the morning.
If you want to have a good day, have a good morning.
If you want to have a good life, have a good day.
So it all comes back to how you start the day, own the morning.
It's a great passage of Marcus Relius worries.
Arguing with himself about getting up at a bed in the morning and he says, look, when
you meant to huddle under the covers and stay warm, he says, no, get to work, do what you
got to do, do what you were put here on this earth to do,
and do it early.
Senika's rule was put the day up for review.
Ask yourself, what could I have done better?
Where did I fall short?
Who do I want to be?
Was I being that person?
So every day the law is put your day up for review,
evaluate yourself, interrogate yourself.
That's how you get better.
Seneca says we suffer more in imagination than reality and that gives us the next law,
which is don't suffer imagined troubles.
The stuff that you're worried about, it'll happen or it won't.
Worrying doesn't affect it, right?
So Seneca says don't feel more than you have to.
Do with that when it comes. doesn't affect it, right? So, Seneca says, don't feel more than you have to do
with that when it comes.
For now, focus on what's in front of you,
focus on what you need to do.
Don't add your suffering by anticipating it,
by suffering in advance.
That's only add-in humanively up to more suffering.
You gotta see the good in people.
That's an important law.
Yes, the steroids were pragmatists.
Yes, they were realistic. They were even a bit pessimistic, but Marcus
really is famously tried to get the most out of people. He tried to see the good in them.
He knew, yes, there's a certain amount of bad people out there, but he always tried to find something good in
everyone he was dealing with. If you don't do this, you're going to be miserable and unhappy.
Marcus really didn't want to be emperor, so it's interesting that in meditations
he gives this rule to himself.
He says, never be overheard complaining,
not even to yourself.
Complaints are for losers, complaints solve nothing,
focus on what you're gonna do,
focus on the good in a situation,
don't allow yourself to complain.
Zeno gives us this rule, two two years one mouth for a reason always listen more than you talk
There's always something you can do we talked about this earlier focus on the response
There's always something you can do some way to move, some little bit of progress that you can make.
Zeno says, well being is realized by small steps, but it's no small thing.
So start small focus on the little thing you can do in this situation.
Mark just really talks about envy, right?
Ditto Roosevelt says that comparison is the thief of joy.
Comparing yourself to other people is focusing on something you don't control.
It never makes you feel good.
It either makes you feel egotistical
or makes you feel crappy.
Only focus on what you do.
Don't compare yourself to other people.
Hold yourself to your own standards
as Kato did that are higher than other people.
So when you're succeeding,
you focus on how much further you have to go.
And when you're failing, you ask yourself,
did I live up to my own standards?
That's what matters.
You can learn something from everyone.
Ralph Waldo Emerson says,
everyone I meet is better than me at something,
and in that I want to learn from that, right?
So focus on what you can learn from every single person,
even people you don't like,
even people you don't respect, even people who suck.
Focus on what you can learn because everyone is better than you at something and even if
they're not better than you at something, you can learn from them in the cautionary tale.
So you can learn from everyone we always want to be learning that's where wisdom comes
from.
Thanks so much for listening to the Daily Stoke Podcast.
If you don't know this, you can get these delivered to you via email every day, check it out at dailystoke.com slash email.
Hey, prime members, you can listen to the Daily Stoke early and add free on Amazon Music,
download the Amazon Music app today, or you can listen early and add free with
Wonderly Plus in Apple podcasts.
Is this thing all?
Check one, two, one, two.
Hey y'all, I'm Kiki Palmer.
I'm an actress, a singer, an entrepreneur, and a Virgo.
I'm just the name of you.
Now I've held so many occupations over the years that my fans lovingly nicknamed me Kiki
Kiki Pabag Palmer.
And trust me, I keep a bad love. But if you ask me, I'm just getting started. And there of the story. I'm going to be a part of the story. I'm going to be a part of the story.
I'm going to be a part of the story.
I'm going to be a part of the story.
I'm going to be a part of the story.
I'm going to be a part of the story.
I'm going to be a part of the story.
I'm going to be a part of the story.
I'm going to be a part of the story.
I'm going to be a part of the story.
I'm going to be a part of the story.
I'm going to be a part of the story. I'm going to be a part of the story. I'm going to be a part of weren't actors? What happened to sitcoms? It's only fans, only bad.
I wanna know, so I asked my mom about it.
These are the questions that keep me up at night,
but I'm taking these questions out of my head
and I'm bringing them to you.
Because on Baby This Is Kiki Palmer,
no topic is off limits.
Follow Baby This Is Kiki Palmer,
whatever you get your podcast.
Hey, prime members, you can listen early and app-free
on Amazon Music.
Download the Amazon Music app today.
Hey, Prime members! You can listen early and app-free on Amazon Music. Download the Amazon Music app today!