The Daily Stoic - BONUS | 7 Stoic Lessons on Wisdom
Episode Date: September 29, 2025As Seneca says, the path to wisdom is acquiring one thing a day. Wisdom takes work. 📖 Preorder the final book in Ryan Holiday's The Stoic Virtues Series: "Wisdom Takes Work": https://store....dailystoic.com/pages/wisdom-takes-work👉 Support the podcast and go deeper into Stoicism by subscribing to The Daily Stoic Premium - unlock ad-free listening, early access, and bonus content: https://dailystoic.supercast.com/🎙️ 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.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Daily Stoic Podcast, where each day we bring you a stoic-inspired meditation
designed to help you find strength and insight and wisdom into everyday life.
Each one of these episodes is based on the 2,000-year-old philosophy that has guided some of
history's greatest men and women help you learn from them.
to follow in their example and to start your day off with a little dose of courage and discipline
and justice and wisdom. For more, visitdailysteoic.com.
We've talked about this before, but Seneca says the path to wisdom is acquiring one thing a day, right?
It's not this transformative moment. There's no lightning bolt. Enlightenment doesn't suddenly hit you.
No, it's a day-to-day thing, right? Wisdom takes work. I love that phrase. Maybe someone should
write a book about it. And of course, that's exactly what I did. Seneca says that no man is wise by chance.
It takes a lot of work. And it's that day-to-day showing up, getting a little here, getting a little there, cumulatively.
we get closer to where we want to be.
So the new book, Wisdom Takes Work, is out in less than 30 days.
It's out on October 21st.
You can pre-order it, anywhere books are sold.
But if you go to daily stoic.com slash wisdom,
there's a bunch of awesome pre-order bonuses,
including a few more of these signed and numbered first editions.
We almost certainly will sell out of them.
So if you want one, grab them.
But this idea of day-to-dayness, the acquiring one thing a day.
As part of the launch, we've been doing 30 days of wisdom on social media.
I'm just riffing on one topic, one idea from the book, from the ancients, as Seneca says to do.
And I put seven of them together for this bonus episode.
Here are seven days of wisdom, the first week of the lessons that you can listen to.
I hope it is of value to you.
And I hope you can take a moment to pre-order the new book.
As I said, dailysttock.com slash wisdom to pre-order the new book.
to pre-order the signed and numbered first editions,
get a bunch of awesome bonuses.
It would mean a lot to me if you could support the book,
if you've liked this podcast over the years.
Yeah, it would mean a lot to me if you could grab it.
DailyStock.com slash wisdom,
and here are seven days of wisdom.
Day one of 30 days of wisdom.
If you want to get better,
the most important thing you can do
is surround yourself.
with better people. It is very rare that someone does not become better when they are surrounded by
great people, socially, professionally, spiritually. I would argue it's also very common that
potentially great people are ruined by not so great influences. Epictetus talked about this.
He said, if you live with a lame man, you will learn how to limp. The Stoics say you want to associate
with people who are likely to improve you. There was even a famous group of Stoics in ancient Rome
known as the Scipionic Circle that was generals and writers, philosophers, and politicians who got together.
They talked about philosophy. They talked about ideas. They challenged each other. They read each other's
work. They asked each other questions. They recommended things to each other. That's what you need.
You want to find a group that challenges you, that inspires you, that understands you, that exposes you to new ideas, that holds you accountable, that shows you what it is possible to do, that shows you that your limitations are just that.
This is day two of 30 Days of Wisdom.
Do you know what the Greek word for idiot means?
It's actually, as Plutarch tells us,
it's the word for someone who hasn't held public office,
who doesn't have real life experience working for the people.
Basically, the Greeks were saying just sitting around and reading things all day is not how
you learn.
You have to put yourself out there.
You have to step into the arena.
You have to try things.
The purpose of knowledge is actually.
but action is also how we get knowledge.
Marcus Aurelius is famous for dragging his philosophy teacher Rousticus out of the classroom
into the political realm.
It was said that he wasn't content to leave him as a pen and ink philosopher.
And you shouldn't be content to be that either.
You have to go out, you have to get real world experience, real world reps,
expose yourself the different kinds of people, different kinds of ideas, different kinds of problems.
And that's how you prevent yourself from being an idiot.
Day 3 of 30 Days of Wisdom.
You must read. Read something new. Read something old. Read something you've already read. Read a few pages of this one or that one. Linger when a passage strikes you. Read something critical. Read something beautiful. Read something dark. Read something you disagree with. Reflect. Read more. Repeat. Talk to the dead until you die.
Day four of 30 days of wisdom.
People think that being a leader is having all the answers, that it's knowing.
It isn't.
Being wise is knowing how to find the answer.
It's knowing how to solve problems.
You have to be able to figure stuff out.
You have to be able to try things.
Abraham Lincoln, who's one of the main characters in Wisdom Takes Work, is a great example of this.
When he decides to begin his campaign against slavery, what does he do?
He goes to the state house in Illinois and begins to look at every primary document he can find about what the founders thought about slavery.
No leader is going to have all the answers.
And in fact, a leader that thinks they have all the answers is a dangerous one, one you want to be worried about.
No, you want a leader who's good at figuring stuff out, who's good.
who's good at learning, who's hungry to learn, right? That's what Lincoln did. He figured it out
day by day. He surrounded himself with different people. He got different opinions. Some people he
agreed with, some he didn't. He was fine to humble himself. He was willing to say, I don't know.
He sought the answer wherever he could find it. And if you want to know more exactly about how he did
this, because it's one of the most incredible examples of leadership in American history,
check out the new book, Wisdom Takes Work, which you can pre-order now. It comes out on
October 21st.
Day 5 of wisdom.
Look, learning isn't this thing you just do when you're young, when you're starting out.
And it's certainly not a thing that's limited to school.
One of my favorite stories about Marks, he's the emperor of Rome.
He's the most powerful man in the world.
And he's well into his life at this point.
And he's leaving the palace in Rome.
And a friend stops him and asks where he's going.
And he says, I'm off to see Sextus, the philosopher, to learn that which I do.
Not yet know. And the friend is amazed. He says, here we have the wisest king of the Romans still taking up his tablets and going to school. Not only is Marcus willing to learn, but he's willing to be a student. He's not even sending for the teacher to come to him. He's willing to do the work. He's willing to put himself out there. He wants to keep learning. It would have been easy for him to be like, I'm smart, I'm old, people think I'm wise. That's enough. But no, he's still hungry to learn. And more specifically, he's still hungry to learn.
That which he does not yet know.
Day six of 30 days of wisdom.
Show me who you spend time with,
and I will show you who you are.
It's a great expression.
It's this idea that we become like the people
we spend the most time with.
But I think it's true not just for people,
but for information.
What does your information diet look like?
Who are you spending time with?
Who are you giving access to your brain?
In meditations, Mark Seriali says,
our soul is dyed by the color of our thoughts.
You know, we're colored, we're died by the inputs,
by the things that we allow access to.
So if you're spending all your time on social media,
if you're following nothing but breaking political news and opinion,
if you're dwelling on things that are inconsequential
or superficial or materialistic,
they're going to become died and changed by that.
But if you spend time with the wisest and smartest people
who ever lived, if you look backwards to history,
you surround yourself with great books
and great ideas and great people, you can become like that too.
Day seven of 30 days of wisdom.
You need a mentor.
We all do.
Admiral Michelle Howard, the first female four-star Admiral in American history.
She once described mentorship as the transference of wisdom.
And I think that's very well said.
Sure, you can learn a lot by experience, but isn't it better to learn from
the experiences of others to learn from people who have been where you have been, who are
further along, who are where you want to go in the future. That's what my mentor, Robert Green,
has been for me. He showed me not just so many work habits and so many secrets and tricks
of the trade. Not only has he taught me so many important ideas and introduced me to so many
books, but he showed me so many personal things as well. He's a model for how I want to live my
life. He's a person I ask for advice about all sorts of things from. You need to find that person in
your life. I think one of the things people get wrong about mentorships is they think that you just
call someone up and say, hey, will you be my mentor? No, it's a relationship that evolves over time.
And it's not a one-way thing either. You give as well as get in a mentor-mente relationship.
But you have to find one almost no one becomes great without someone ahead of them, showing them the ropes,
showing them the tricks of the trade, transferring that wisdom to them.
Hey, it's Ryan.
Thank you for listening to the Daily Stoag podcast.
I just wanted to say we so appreciate it.
We love serving you.
It's amazing to us that over 30 million people have downloaded these episodes
in the couple years we've been doing it.
It's an honor.
Please spread the word, tell people about it,
and this isn't to sell anything.
I just wanted to say thank you.
Look, ads are annoying. They are to be avoided, if at all possible. I understand as a content creator why they need to exist. That's why I don't begrudge them when they appear on
the shows that I listen to. But again, as a person who has to pay a podcast producer and has to
pay for equipment and for the studio and the building that the studio is in, it's a lot to keep
something like the Daily Stoic going. So if you want to support a show but not listen to ads,
well, we have partnered with Supercast to bring you a ad-free version of Daily Stoic. We're calling
at Daily Stoic Premium. And with premium, you can listen to every episode of the Daily Stoic
podcast completely ad-free, no interruptions, just the ideas, just the messages, just the conversations
you came here for. And you can also get early access to episodes before they're available to the
public. And we're going to have a bunch of exclusive bonus content and extended interviews in there
just for Daily Stoic premium members as well. If you want to remove distractions, go deeper into Stoicism
and support the work we do here. Well, it takes you.
It takes less than a minute to sign up for Daily Stoic Premium, and we are offering a limited time discount of 20% off your first year.
Just go to dailystoic.com slash premium to sign up right now or click the link in the show of descriptions to make those ads go away.