The Daily Stoic - Are You Afraid to Start? | 10 Years Of Lessons From The Obstacle Is The Way
Episode Date: December 17, 2024We have to be strong enough to will ourselves to do what needs to be done. Don’t be afraid to start. Don’t put it off any longer.The Daily Stoic New Year, New You Challenge is 3 weeks of ...ALL-NEW, actionable challenges, presented in an email per day, built around the best, most timeless wisdom in Stoic philosophy, to help you create a better life, and a new you in 2025. Why 3 weeks? Because it takes human beings 21 days to build new habits and skills, to create the muscle memory of making beautiful choices each and every day.Head over to dailystoic.com/challenge today to sign up.📕 Get a signed, numbered first-edition of the 10th Anniversary Edition of The Obstacle Is the Way by Ryan Holiday at dailystoic.com/obstacle🎙️ Follow The Daily Stoic Podcast on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/dailystoicpodcast🎥 Watch top moments from The Daily Stoic Podcast on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@dailystoicpodcast✉️ Want Stoic wisdom delivered to your inbox daily? Sign up for the FREE Daily Stoic email at https://dailystoic.com/dailyemail🏛 Get Stoic inspired books, medallions, and prints to remember these lessons at the Daily Stoic Store: https://store.dailystoic.com/📱 Follow us: Instagram, Twitter, YouTube, TikTok, and 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.
Are you afraid to start?
Are you afraid to start?
Are you afraid to start?
Are you afraid to start?
Are you afraid to start?
Are you afraid to start?
Are you afraid to start?
Are you afraid to start?
Are you afraid to start?
Are you afraid to start?
Are you afraid to start?
Are you afraid to start?
Are you afraid to start?
Are you afraid to start?
Are you afraid to start?
Are you afraid to start?
Are you afraid to start? Are you afraid to start? Are you afraid to start? Are you afraid to start? Are you afraid to start? It could fail, it could go badly, it could be harder than you expect it, it could.
But how would you know?
How will you know until you start?
That's the one thing all fools do, Seneca said.
They delay to start.
They put it off, they let their fears
or their laziness win.
And this is where two essential stoic virtues come in,
courage and discipline.
We have to be brave enough to push past our fears,
we have to be strong enough to will ourselves
to do what needs to be done.
Perhaps this is where the third virtue comes in.
Justice.
What you're doing might be important.
It could make a real difference.
It could fail, but it could also help people.
And here you are putting it off.
Here you are taking counsel of your fears,
letting the resistance win.
And this is not without costs to yourself and to others.
Don't be afraid to start. Don't put it off any longer. Do it. Do what you can. Do good.
That's the whole goal behind the Daily Stoic New Year New You Challenge. It's designed to push you
to get started, to get the ball rolling, to build momentum,
to help you make 2025 the year you realize just how strong you are, to challenge you to do what
you are capable of doing in this life. And if you're worried that it's all too much, that it might
be hard, that it's this or that, well let's remember what Seneca said, that no man is more
unhappy than he who never faces adversity, "'for he is never permitted to prove himself.'"
And for the last six months,
we've been working on the Daily Stoic New Year New Challenge.
We redo it every year.
We come up with a bunch of stoic-inspired challenges
and practices that will help you become
what you are capable of becoming.
And it's designed to meet the unique year that is 2025.
And, you know, it's gearing up to be a crazy year.
But just imagine starting every day of this new year
with a clear, actionable challenge,
when you can't procrastinate,
when you can't get out of just a powerful push
to help propel you closer to the life you want.
And I wanna see you in there.
I do the challenge every year, thousands of other stoics all over the life you want. And I wanna see you in there. I do the challenge every year,
thousands of other stoics all over the world do it.
And I'm pumped to see you in there.
It starts on January 1st.
Don't delay, don't put it off.
Sign up, I'll see you in there,
dailystoic.com slash challenge.
It's always funny to hear the people who did put it off
because customer service rep Ashley goes,
I got so many emails on the first and the second
and the third people asking if they still sign up,
can we let them in?
Well, yes, I want to see you in their
dailystoke.com slash challenge, don't delay.
Let's have an awesome new year.
Almost 10 years ago, in a very different office than this, it was this small nook under a loft bed in an apartment in New York City.
I started working on this book called The Obstacle is the Way.
Flash forward now, that book has sold millions of copies.
It's in 40 languages. I'm also a very different person than I was when I wrote it. I'm having this unique
experience of the publisher asked me to write a new forward to go in and kind of
correct things, change things, tweak things, update. The obstacle is the way. Here are my note cards.
I have a stack of note cards that I've accumulated since the book came out of just little things
that I definitely want to add.
So I have these and then this is the box.
This is the book.
As I wrote it, I'm gonna have to go back through
these cards like, look, this is an email.
An email I sent myself as I was writing
the intro of the obstacles away.
Let's see when I do that.
This is the intro. This is a chunk of the intro
of The Obstacle's The Way,
which I sent myself as a note in June of that year, I think.
So I was already working on the intro
and then this made it into the book.
So I'm just going back through and tweaking stuff.
I'm already making some changes.
That's my next little project,
the 10th anniversary edition the Alps closed away
Almost ten years ago exactly I was in this exact spot
I was going for a run along the East River in Manhattan and this idea popped into my head when something like in the year
170 in his tent on the front line in the war in
Germania Marcus Aurelius sat down to write. That's the first line in The
Obstacle is the Way. I was on my run and it just popped into my head. That book has
gone on to sell millions of copies. It reintroduced stoicism to millions of
people. It's been this incredible journey that I could not have anticipated. But I
sort of take two quick lessons from that one
It's always a good idea to go for a run when you get your body movie
You have no idea what can pop in your head and two there's this stoic idea that we never step in the same river twice
The river is different. I'm different
I'm standing in the exact spot, but so much has transpired how I would even think about that line how I think about the Stokes
Has changed we are always changing the world is changing, even though things stay the same.
And that's the lesson.
Seneca wasn't just a philosopher, he was a writer. And so he knew this very acutely,
the mortification you feel when you go back and read or edit something. Not just that you did,
but that you put out
in the world.
He says, when I think of all the things I have said, I envy the mute.
This process of going back through and updating the obstacle is the way 10 years later of
listening to my voice on the audiobook, having to redo the audiobook, changing sentences,
seeing sentences that not just like I put out in the world, but literally millions of
people saw. you envy the
mute. It's a very humbling thing to go back and look at what you did and what you thought was your
best work and maybe indeed was your best work at that time. And you see what does or doesn't age
well. I think what doesn't age well is certainty, simplification, judgment. And so hopefully as I've
gone back through the obstacles
way, I've softened some of those things.
I've been kinder and more empathetic, more nuanced.
Mostly I'm trying to take that forward on the next project.
Like if you think about that unpleasant feeling,
I get to adjust it, fix it here,
but I can't undo that it happened in the past.
What I can do though, is on my next project,
be a little wiser, be a little kinder,
be a little bit more open-minded, do a little bit more work. So in a way, that's the real lesson.
That's like the way I'm getting better for having gone through this at sometimes,
this sometimes agonizing process. I'm seeing all the ways that I have changed and become better in the last 10 years, but I want to become better
so that when I look at this edition in 10 years, there's still going to be some mortifications,
still going to be some changes I want to yet, but you can see all the red stuff.
So here's just some tweaks.
There's a whole, like I'm adding stuff.
Like I have this chapter about Rockefeller in the book
and like obviously Rockefeller was not the greatest dude.
So I'm sort of qualifying that.
There's a paragraph there.
Cutting, there's a section on Rommel that I'm cutting.
This is a piece about the Canadian astronaut,
Chris Hadfield.
He's saying that I've done this in like a million talks.
So, and I found it after I finished the book
and I would talk about it when I would talk about
the obstacles of the way, the audience has always loved it.
So I'm adding that in the book,
but he has this great line.
He says that in space, when you run into a problem,
there's a bunch of things you can do
to make a situation better.
And then he says, there's no problem so bad
that you cannot make it worse also.
So that's going in there.
For instance, I've already messed with,
you can see I did a lot on one of my favorite stories
in the book, which is how Marcus at the end of his life,
so I'm adding, this is a deeper story,
that the end of the book as I wrote it 10 plus years ago
was only about Marcus and the fight against Avidius Cassius.
But I'm taking this more fuller picture of Marcus,
which is the plague that he faces,
the floods that he faces, his stomach ailment,
the years at war, burying children,
just like a life of pain and struggle.
There's this ancient historian that says that
Marcus doesn't meet with the good fortune that he deserves and his whole reign is involved
in a series of troubles and so I'm sort of talking about how Marcus's life
embodies this idea of the obseposal way that he doesn't just coin the phrase
that he's life really illustrates how he lived it. So anyways these are all the
stuff the things that I'm adding and I have to turn it in by beginning of
January to get it out for the 10th anniversary.
So that's what I'm working on now.
["The Last Supper"]
As crazy as this week has been, I feel like I will spin off the planet if I don't get at least one small look at the manuscript I'm supposed to be working on, which is the
10-year anniversary of Obstacle.
My rule, this is like a discipline thing too, is like you don't have to be perfect all the
time, you don't have to make enormous contributions the time. You don't have to make enormous contributions.
You just have to make lots of little contributions.
And so if I can just go,
hey, did I do one or two good things
to the manuscript this week?
That's enough.
That's what I'm doing now.
So I'm literally, it's literally,
it might seem like this isn't what a writer does.
You know, it's like spitting a globe
and just pointing out where we're gonna go.
I'm literally just kind of like rolling the dice
and pulling up a random spot and just kind of spot checking and seeing what I want to fix.
Go ahead. Yes.
Go ahead. Yes.
Probably the biggest change between writing it the first time and working on it now
just came in my life or my lifestyle.
I was with my wife when I was writing The Obstacles Away,
but we lived in this tiny apartment in New York City.
We had a dog, but we didn't have kids. We weren't married.
And as I'm working on it now, I have two kids.
My son is turning eight this fall,
so he's almost as old as the book.
But my life is noisier, my life is more unpredictable,
my life is more chaotic, I have more responsibilities.
It's not right to say that having kids is an obstacle,
it's not, but it is a challenge.
It is a constant
trial. It challenges you in so many ways. And as I have been working on the book, that's
one of the things I thought a lot about is how do these ideas inform me as a parent?
How do you apply these ideas to the unpredictable, crazy, exhausting, overwhelming 24 seven job that is raising
human beings. Where do I find the time to work on this book in addition to all the things
that I have going on? It was a lot. The last 10 years have been a lot. It is Thanksgiving. It is Thanksgiving 2023. My kids are watching Spongebob on the TV there
and I am in Florida on vacation down by the beach and I am working on the preface of the
new intro. I've been chugging away on this and it's just going to be like maybe one,
two pages at the beginning of the book to mark
the fact that 10 plus years ago I sat down to write this book. I'm talking about the fact that
this one person who predicted it would sell 5,000 copies. The obstacles away sold more like 2 million copies.
There was probably a couple thousand people who cared about Stoicism on the internet at that time.
And now every morning the Daily Stoke reaches a million people by like 9 a.m.
So that's sort of what I'm talking about how I've come to interact and understand the material
since so much has happened since it came out. There was the pandemic, there was the books doing
well, there was hundreds of thousands of miles on the road, there was getting married, there was
having kids, just a lot of life and that's what
the new intro right now.
And then my publisher is like right here and I have to drop off the 10 year anniversary
manuscript of Obstacle.
So I'll get hit the black card.
It's crazy to me that ten years ago, almost exactly this book was being released, my first
book on stoicism and now I'm editing the 10 year anniversary in the green room of the Breakfast Club. I gotta drop this off on my publisher, who when I wrote it the first time
was way downtown on Barrick Street,
and now it's all the way up here, near the park,
because Penguin Murn's really random house,
but now I'm just tightening up.
This is the second pass,
which I guess now is like my fifth or sixth pass,
because I've done it so many times, but.
so many times but...
Keeping our word does cost us. But it's not free to break your word
because the next time that person's not going to trust someone else.
And so we all think about it as like, what's good for me?
But what we're doing is we're stealing from the public trust from our ability to collaborate and count on
each other because everyone's saying you know your word isn't worth anything and
collectively unfortunately in a lot of cases it's not. I pride myself on being
honest and truthful at all times. I love chapter 3 in the book Tell the Truth but I
think sometimes when we say I'm gonna be honest with you, it's a it's a buffer to this whammy I'm about to leave.
I'm actually gonna be a dick is what I mean.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. So I'm still pretty old school about it.
Not only do I write the books with physical note cards, having read physical books, but
then I do all my notes.
I have the publisher print them,
like print me out a bound manuscript.
I wanna see what it's gonna look like
in the size that it's gonna be.
And then I do all my notes.
This is the second pass, but.
So I realized something crazy.
I realized that I sent a bird scrap of this
from like 10 years ago on a plane,
flying across Australia, and then here's the one.
It doesn't feel like it's any of the best.
Am I in here?
Where?
Wow, there's a bit of lines up there? That's incredible.
Check that one.
Oh, they're not behind the glass.
Hello?
Yeah, try to keep your hands to yourself.
How do I get all six?
Okay, that's insane.
So then we'll have to replace them.
Do you think that's a first addition?
It might be.
How would you decide which one's going?
I can find out.
Like do you ever demote?
I don't think we were taken in one way. How would you decide which one's going? I can find out.
Like, do you ever demote?
I don't think we were taken away.
I am now having to do the new audiobook.
It's a Saturday. I got up early.
I came here before my kids' soccer game.
It's supposed to be a 20, 25 minute drive.
Took 50 minutes.
I was getting frustrated about the traffic.
Then I came upon the source of the traffic.
And it was a fatal car accident.
There was the body out in the road covered in a tarp, and it sort of put some things
in perspective.
And I was trying to think, okay, what did I do with the extra 25 minutes?
Was I as in control of my emotions as I'd like to be?
I don't think so.
But I listened to a nice podcast in the road, I learned something gave
me an excuse to text a friend about that podcast. So I'm gonna
I'm gonna see it as a positive and then I get to come here and
do what I love. I noticed something here that I need to
fix already. That's the other thing about audiobooks. What
they are is a chance for you to read the draft all the way
through very slowly sort of performatively, and you catch some stuff that you want to fix.
When you go through the book, how do you determine what you want to change and what stays?
There's a bunch of very specific things that I had notes that I wanted to change. And then I kind of, I would just, you know, every day I was working on it, I would just
open it, flip to a random spot, and then just kind of reread it and ask myself, hey, is
this how I would say this now?
How could this be said better?
What is this missing?
So a lot of times it was stuff like that. And then on the, even during the audio book, which I just did and in this chair, having
to say every word of it out loud was like an excruciating experience because I hadn't
done that for 11 years. And to go through and have to say things that you put into print a decade ago, there's a
Seneca thing he says, when I think of all the things that I have said, I envy the mute.
And the experience of editing something you've already published or re-recording the audio book of something
that millions of people have listened to,
you're like, I mean, it's horrifying
because you go, I said that?
Like, I allowed myself to leave it at that?
And I mean, not everywhere, there's lots and lots
and lots of parts of the obstacles
the way I'm very proud of.
But if you can reread something you wrote
or worked on a long time ago, and you think it's perfect,
I mean, to me, that's a sign that you haven't gotten
any better since you've done it.
Like the idea that you don't have improvements to make,
to me, would imply that that was the peak, which I definitely don't think is true, and I definitely don't have improvements to make to me would imply that that was the peak,
which I definitely don't think is true and I definitely don't want to be true. I mean,
what was the point of continuing to do it if you're not getting any better?
I always think you have a unique relationship to your work and that it's like a lot of your
favorite stuff as a reader that you're bringing together. Sure. And the experience of going back
and looking at a lot of those stories, I imagine,
was like, I actually think the lesson embedded
in that story is different than I initially thought.
Yeah, well, that's the idea.
That way, when they say,
no, you know what's happened in the same river twice,
that's the other part of it is that
what stands out at you in a specific story is different.
And yeah, the meaning of it can be different.
So yeah, like when I talked about Rockefeller at 24,
I'm just thinking of him
and I'm only thinking about him in the context
of how did this guy overcome obstacles? I'm only thinking about him in the context of how did this guy overcome obstacles?
I'm only thinking of the heroic aspects.
But then the book I wrote immediately after was about ego.
And then I wrote a book about stillness.
And then I've written a book about discipline.
And then I wrote a book about justice.
And so if those subsequent deep dives into topics
don't inform your worldview going forward,
what does that say?
And so now, and of course I understood these things
about Rockefeller, but that wasn't what I was focused on.
Those weren't like the salient things
that were jumping out at me.
But now looking back at this person and my own writing
and what I want the book to mean to people,
you're adding on these additional layers.
And I think the portrait that I present of him You're adding on these additional layers.
And I think the portrait that I present of him is more nuanced.
And then also just on top of this, I've had a decade more of reading.
So I've read more, like my stuff on Ulysses S. Grant, my stuff on Lincoln in this book,
I think are much better now because I've read literally thousands of pages about their lives
and the time that they lived.
And all the while I was making, oh, that's a perfect obstacle is the way thing that I
want to add in there.
And so I just, yeah, I have these like, it's like comedians talk about tags.
There was just like, which is like a thing at the end of a joke.
There was just like a lot of little tags or little extra layers or an additional detail that I wanted to put in
there.
How did... So I remember in the prologue or the intro of this book, you specifically talk
about or sort of anticipating a lot of people's, how they associated the word stoicism
10 years ago.
Yes.
And the work you've done since then to make that word mean something very different to
a lot of people now.
Yeah.
And did that.
I remember when I was writing the book, the stoicism subreddit on Reddit had like 9,000 subscribers.
And I think it has like a half a million now,
some crazy number.
And so, yeah, when I was writing the obstacles away,
it was, hey, let me tell you about this thing
called Stoicism.
And the task was much more along the lines of
popularizing and making interesting a thing that a lot of people did not think was interesting.
And then one of the tricky things about success is if you succeed, the original context in
which you were operating is obliterated. And so the idea that Stoicism was
this unattractive or uninteresting thing to people no longer exists. And so I think that's something
else I wanted to very much address in the book. I'm now obligated and able to give a fuller picture of the philosophy that I think is more urgently needed than
it was then, if that makes sense.
The feeling I feel most strongest from this experience though is just gratitude.
The idea when I was writing The Obstacle is a way that I would still be writing 10 years later,
that it would sell millions of copies,
that it would be in all these different languages,
that I would have this platform,
that Stoicism would be as popular as it is,
that was incomprehensible to me.
I feel incredibly fortunate,
and that's possible because every one of you
that watched one of these videos,
that followed us on social media that read the book.
I wouldn't be here, the book wouldn't be here, Stoicism wouldn't be here without the collective.
And also just the sheer amount of emails and feedback and sometimes not so nice criticism,
but criticism that was not incorrect.
All of that shaped and informed who I am as a person and also shaped and informed this
new edition of the book.
And I'm better for all of that and I appreciate it. and informed who I am as a person and also shaped and informed this new edition of the book.
And I'm better for all of that and I appreciate it.
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