The Daily Stoic - A Person Without Boundaries Is Not a Person | 7 Stoic Keys To Happiness
Episode Date: January 17, 2023It’s clear when you read about Cato and Marcus Aurelius that these were men of great reserve. Antoninus, too. They were friendly and kind of course, and to people who knew them well, there ...was frivolity and fun, but they kept something back from strangers.They were self-contained.Today, Ryan examines why having the discipline to create strong boundaries for yourself is how you define who you are, especially in the age of social media, He also presents seven Stoic principles to adhere to on your quest to live the virtuous life.📔 Visit The Painted Porch for signed copies of Discipline is Destiny.✉️ 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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Welcome to the Daily Stoic Podcast, where each day we read a passage of ancient wisdom designed to help you in your everyday life.
On Tuesdays, we take a closer look at these stoic ideas, how we can apply them in our actual lives. Thanks for listening, and I hope you enjoy.
A person without boundaries is not a person.
It's clear when you read about Kato and Marcus Aurelius that these were men of great
reserve, Antoninus too.
They were friendly and kind, of course,
and to people who knew them well,
there was frivolity and fun,
but they kept something back from strangers.
They were self-contained.
This was a rare thing in Rome,
and it's a rare thing today.
We are surrounded by oversharers and gossip mongers.
People celebrate being hot messes,
not just getting up in your business,
but getting you up in theirs. We have busy bodies and energy vampires, trolls, and toxic narcissists.
Nobody thinks before they say things, nobody holds back. Social media has created the
nepotemic of poor boundaries, which in turn has created a culture full of people with poor self-image,
low self-esteem, and very little
sense for where other people end, and they begin.
The advent of a new year, I think, is a perfect time to commit to having better boundaries
in your life.
Boundaries between work and your personal life boundaries between you and people in your
life.
To draw some healthy borders between what you'll share and what you won't, what you'll
accept and what you won't, how you'll accept, and what you won't,
how you'll treat others, and how you expect to be treated.
What is your responsibility and what isn't?
As Jay-Z explained once, particularly in regard to adjusting to his success and fame,
it's about knowing who you are and just doing what's comfortable for you,
not letting other people pull you in a thousand different directions. Because if you allow
it, he says, people will have you doing all kinds of stuff. That stuff has to make sense for you.
The Stoics talked about knowing your place and path in life. They talked about tuning out gossip
and keeping your distance from flawed people, about not picking up bad habits from others,
about reserve and dignity and poise, about not caring,
about what others think.
This is difficult stuff.
It takes a lot of self-discipline, but it is the key to health and happiness and in the
case of Marcus, and Cato, and Antoninus.
It's also the key to greatness.
Actually, Boundaries is the last chapter that I put in discipline as destiny.
I thought the book was done,
and then I just kept coming back to this idea
that bound, you know, discipline isn't just like
working really hard, it's not just abstaining
from eating this or that.
It's not just not losing your temper,
but the discipline to be like,
this is who I am, this is what I'm comfortable with,
this is what I'm not comfortable with.
Speaking up, saying those things,
I know the pandemic really challenged my boundaries
in a lot of ways, especially early on
from a health perspective.
Different people had different things
that were comfortable with and going,
here's what I'm comfortable with.
I don't feel weird about it.
Here, I'm gonna say it.
I'm gonna speak up to be heard, all that kind of stuff.
So as the last chapter I wrote in the book,
I think one of the most important ones.
And I just think it's important
that we understand this more expansive idea of discipline.
And this discipline determines who we are.
That's the premise of discipline is destiny.
If you haven't read the book,
I think you'll like it, sound like crazy,
been an honor to hear from all of you, have read it.
You can check it out.
Discipline is destiny, the power of self-control,
anywhere books are sold and grab the audio book,
which is doing awesome.
You've got signed copies of the painted porch or at store.dailystoic.com
Hi I'm David Brown the host of Wunderree's podcast business wars and in our new
season Walmart must fight off target the new discounter that's both savvy and
fashion forward listen to business wars on Amazon Music or wherever you get your podcasts.
When people think of stoicism, I think the last thing they think is happiness.
Because part of what that lowercase stoicism means to people in the English language is like,
has no emotions. And we think of happiness as being a very emotional state.
I think to the Stoics, happiness was also the removal of destructive emotions,
things like envy or fear or avarice or aggression or ambition.
I'm Ryan Holliday, I've not only written now 10 books about Stoic philosophy,
but I'm a real human being for whom happiness is important.
Aristotle talks about happiness as you
die in the air, human flourishing. I think that's the place that Stoicism is trying to get
you. And so in today's episode, we're going to talk about some stoic strategies for happiness.
Does it mean exuberant excitement and pleasure? That's not what the Stoic's thought of happiness
as. We're going to talk about strategies for stowa happiness and what that looked like for Stokes.
You can't base your happiness on external approval
because the Stokes would say it is firmly outside
our dichotomy of control.
It's not up to us.
Mark Surrealist says that ambition is tying your well-being
to what other people say and do.
Meaning you don't control it, meaning they can take it away
from you, they can reject you, they can deprive you of it. This is sanity is time to your own action.
You have to have the internal compass that says to yourself, I'm doing good work, what I'm doing
matters. This is the right thing. This is success. You have to define that for yourself. You can't let
other people do it because then you've handed over your happiness, your wealth, everything to somebody else.
It's really easy to feel dissatisfied.
Data Roosevelt says,
comparison is the thief of joy.
Seneca quoting Epicurus says,
if you don't regard what you have as enough,
you'll never be happy,
even if you're the ruler of the whole world.
So for the Stoics, for the Epicurians,
it was about enough.
What is the right amount?
It was about figuring out how to be grateful, how to be happy for what you have, rather
than lying to yourself and telling yourself, if I get this thing, if I just do this, if
I get this recognition, if I win this achievement, if I win this high office, that's what Cicero
and Senna could get so long as they think that if they just get to the top, then they'll
be happy.
No, this is enough, right? You've got to figure out what enough is.
Enough is where happiness comes from because enough is what you have right now, right?
We all have enough right now and if we could see that we would be happy.
Joy or happiness or delight, that's not an emotion we associate.
But the Stoics experience that Epictetus says,
me, I delight in my own improvement day to day. I love that. His
delight wasn't coming from money or fame or recognition or
pleasure. It was from getting better every day. It was from
improving. It was from fulfilling his potential. It wasn't
based on externals as the Stoke's warn us against. It was
based on the inner where he could do on himself. It was knowing that he was becoming a little bit better, a little bit
Wiser, a little bit more self controlled, self-contained, a little more resilient. That's where the Stoke finds joy and happiness and pleasure.
The secret to productivity, but most of all happiness, is to not be so reachable. We have our phones, we have emails, we have watches,
we have 50 different social
inboxes, and then we wondered why we never get anything done.
Seneca says if you want to improve, be content to be seen as ignorant about some matters.
You can't always know what's going on. You can't always be reachable. Napoleon famously
would wait three weeks until he opened his mail because he knew that most issues would
resolve themselves. If you are always reachable, you will not be focused on the big important things.
You will not be doing your work and you will not be philosophical.
Instead of talking about happiness, Aristotle uses this word,
Diodymania, which basically means human flourishing,
which I think is a better way of thinking about happiness.
Happiness isn't exuberance, it's not excitement,
it's not getting everything you want.
I think it's a deeper place,
it's when you're realizing the potential
that you have as a human being in all your forms.
And so if we can think that of happiness as that,
the byproduct of doing all the things right in your life,
wanting the right things, living the right your life, wanting the right things,
living the right way, prioritizing the right things, doing the right thing.
Happiness is the byproduct of that.
I think it's a better way to think about it.
Victor Frankl talks about how happiness must ensue.
It cannot be pursued.
It's not a thing you get as a reward here.
It's actually the day to dayness of living and acting
rightly, or for the stokes, living and acting with virtue. Very little is needed for a happy life
according to the stokes. Moussounius Rufus, one of the great stokes, he's exiled four times.
And what does he learn losing everything? He learns how much he was taking for granted. Yes,
he misses Rome. He doesn't like being far away, but he reminds himself, did I actually experience Rome
while I was there?
What do I actually need to be happy?
He says, I need a little bit of food, I need water,
I need sunshine.
I had those things in Rome.
He sort of noticed that he's like one of those people
that lives in New York City and brags about all its amenities,
but he never took advantage of them.
And he realized that actually the simple life was better.
The simple life was more philosophical. And and it needed very little to be happy and
that what he had was enough. Everyone wants to become beautiful. They still
say you become beautiful when you make beautiful choices. And I think this is
true. When you see someone who is content with themselves, when someone who knows
they are getting better, when someone is making Positive choices in their life that it radiates from them regardless of what their body looks like regardless of how old
They are regardless of what genetic gifts they have you want to be beautiful make beautiful choices get up right manage your life
Have a good schedule as we talked about before have a good
Media diet focus on doing difficult things.
Push yourself out of your comfort zone.
Beauty isn't just physical.
It comes from who you are as a human being,
how you carry yourself, what you think about yourself,
what difference you make in the world.
You wanna be beautiful, the stokes say.
Start right now by making beautiful choices. Hey, prime members, you can listen to the Daily Stoic 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 gonna end up on Page Six
or Du Moir or in court.
I'm Matt Bellissi.
And I'm Sydney Battle,
and we're the host of Wondery's new podcast, Dis and Tell,
where each episode we unpack a different iconic celebrity
feud from the buildup, 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 Brittany and Jamie Lynn Spears.
When Brittany's fans formed the free Brittany 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.
You can listen ad-free on Amazon Music or the Wondering app.