The Daily Stoic - A Sense of Urgency | Following The Doctor’s Orders
Episode Date: November 3, 2022In the kitchen at Per Se, one of the best restaurants in the world, there is a sign. All it says is: A Sense of Urgency. That’s what a great chef, a great service staff, a great organizatio...n has. A great person needs it too.✉️ Want Stoic wisdom delivered to your inbox daily? Sign up for the FREE Daily Stoic email at https://dailystoic.com/dailyemail📕 We created a premium leather-bound edition of Meditations- To learn more and to pick up your own copy of this beautiful new edition of Meditations, visit dailystoic.com/meditations📱 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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Welcome to another episode of the Daily Stoke Podcast.
On Thursdays, we do double duty, not just reading our daily meditation, but also reading
a passage from the book, The Daily Stokeic, 366 Meditations on Wisdom, Perseverance,
and 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 Epipetus Markus, Relius, 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 Wendery's podcast business wars.
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A sense of urgency.
In the kitchen at Perse, one of the best restaurants in the world, there is a sign. All it says is a sense of urgency.
That's what a great chef, a great service staff, a great organization has,
a great person needs it too. Yet far too many of us lack this. In Meditations, Marcus Rios
chides himself for acting as if he's going to live forever, as if he has unlimited time.
You could be good today, he writes, instead you choose tomorrow. He tells himself he needs to concentrate like a Roman and do the task in front of him
as if it was the last thing he was doing in his life.
In short, he needs to attack everything with a sense, a urgency.
We all do.
We say that we're doing it, that we're working on something, but are you?
Where is the progress that proves it?
It seems more like you're acting like you have forever, that the customer isn't all that
important, that it doesn't matter if the food gets cold. You need to hurry up, you need to get
after it. Not with frenzy or haste, but with all deliberate speed, with purpose, with the
concentration of a Roman, the clarity of a person who understands that tomorrow is not a guarantee.
People progress your destiny. It's waiting on you. It demands
a sense of urgency. I actually talk a lot about a sense of urgency and quote that line in
part one of discipline is destiny, the power of self control. Hustle is obviously super important
that sense of urgency, but then it has to be balanced with deliberateness and care and sweating the small stuff.
It's captured by an
expression that was a favorite of the
Roman Emperor Augustus,
Fistino Lente, make haste slowly
and, uh, anyways, I talk
all about that in discipline is destiny.
And I, I hope you check it out.
I'm really proud of the book, the book's doing great.
I've heard from thousands of you all over the world
that have enjoyed it. You can grab discipline as destiny, the power of self control, the books do in great, I've heard from thousands of you all over the world that have enjoyed it. You can grab discipline as Destiny the Power of Self Control anywhere books are sold.
You've got signed copies at dailysteoic.com and I do hope you check it out and of course wish you much,
much discipline.
Following the doctor's orders, this is today's entry in the Daily Stoic. Just as
we commonly hear people say that the doctor prescribed someone particular
riding exercises or ice baths or walking without shoes, we should in the same
way that nature prescribed someone to be diseased or disabled or to suffer any
kind of impairment. In the case of the doctor prescribed means something ordered to help aid someone's healing, but in the case of nature it means that what happens to
each of us is ordered to help aid our destiny. Marcus Aurelius is Meditations 5-8. It is funny
right to think about in the Roman days someone being prescribed to walk without shoes or to write a horse, also
I guess better than being prescribed bleeding.
But we'll get to today's meditation.
The Stokes were masters at analogies and used them as a tool to help strengthen their reasoning.
Here Marcus Aurelius observes how willingly we will put up with unpleasantness if commanded
by the magic words, doctors, orders.
The doctor says that you've got to take this nasty medicine and you'll do it.
The doctor tells you that you have to start sleeping, hanging upside down like a bat.
You'll feel silly, but soon enough, you'll get to dangling because you think it will make
you better.
On the other hand, when it comes to external events, we fight like hell if anything happens
contrary to our plans.
But what if, Marcus asked, the doctor
had prescribed the exact same thing as a part of our treatment? What if it's as good as
taking our medicine? Well, what if? What's so magical about those words, the doctor orders,
is that feel like we don't have a choice. Of course, you don't have to listen to the
doctor. I guess some people don't listen to their doctors. But you go, oh, well, they know better. They chose this for me. That's what the
treatment of this disease ailment sickness is. Who am I to object? I will accept it and I will go
along with it because I want to get better. But then when you're stuck in traffic or a job turns
out to be harder than you thought
or relationship turns out to be more difficult than you thought, you have to do anything
that you didn't expect, you didn't want, you don't like.
Because you feel like you have a choice at the matter, you don't want to do it.
But what if Marcus is saying, actually, this too is chosen to make you better.
In a sense, that's what the obstacle is the way as a philosophy is really about.
It's this idea that these things aren't things.
We have to do their things.
We get to do things that were chosen for us.
You can see it as some sort of higher power if you want.
You can see it as fate if you want.
You can just simply see it as a thing, but that it is something that's going
to make you better, that it was assigned to you.
Right?
In Meditations, Mark Suryo's talks about how it goes, it's unfortunate that this happened.
And then it catches up.
No, it's fortunate that it happens to me, right?
He's saying, oh, no, wait, this was chosen for me.
I am right for this. This
is right for me. So stop fighting. Stop pushing against the thing and see it as a prescription.
See it as part of the process. See it as an assignment you've been given. How will you
handle it? Are you going to be a good patient or a bad patient, a good student or a bad student?
This is everything.
These things were chosen for you
and all you have to do in turn is choose them back.
It's not that life is short, Seneca says.
It's that we waste a lot of it.
The practice of Memento Mori, the meditation on death,
is one of the most powerful and eye-opening things that there is.
We built this Memento Mori calendar for Dio Stoke to illustrate that exact idea.
Your life in the best case scenario is 4,000 weeks. Are you gonna let those weeks slip by or are you
going to seize them? The act of unrolling this calendar, putting it on your wall
and every single week that bubble is filled in that black mark is marking it off
forever. Have something to show, not just for your years,
but for every single dot that you filled in
that you really lived that week,
that you made something of it.
You can check it out at dailystoward.com.
slash M and calendar. 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 add free with
Wondery Plus in Apple podcasts.
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