The Daily Stoic - Can You Play Ball? | How To Read Books Effectively (7 Stoic Tips)
Episode Date: October 18, 2022Life throws stuff at us. We have to figure out how to catch it and throw it back. That’s what Epictetus meant when he said we don’t control what happens, we control how we respond.✉️ ...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 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 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.
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Can you play ball?
Life throws stuff at us.
We have to figure out how to catch it, throw it back.
That's what Epic teedus meant when he said,
we don't control what happens, we control how we respond.
But he also liked that throwing metaphor
and clearly was way more than a casual fan of sports.
Epic Titus admired the way that skilled athletes caught a ball
that was thrown to them and whipped it right back.
They didn't complain, they didn't demand certain conditions
be met before they dove for it.
He admired their concentration, their coolness under pressure, their grace, their creativity.
In his view, Socrates was such an athlete.
Only the ball, in his case, Epictetus said, was life, imprisonment, exile, or execution,
with the prospect of losing his wife and having his children reduced to the status of orphans.
Those were the stakes of the game and still he played and handled the ball with a plumb. What about you? Are you such an athlete?
Can you ball or do you make excuses? Do you prefer to sit in the stands and judge
the people who play? When or lose what matters the Stoics believed was that we
tried, that we did our best, that we dove for the ball, that we risked it all but
played fair, that we held our head up up high that we didn't get intimidated or make excuses. Life is going to throw you curve balls. Are you ready?
That's my Amor Fati coin, which I think is similar to what Epictetus is talking about. A great
athlete loves to play. They love to play when it's easy,
they love to play when it's hard, they love good conditions, bad conditions.
They love diving for the ball, they love when the game is hard, they love everything that life
throws at them. Certainly, Socrates did, and I just, I love this metaphor and image from
Epicetus, it's brilliant. The image of Am Morphati, as we've done in the coin
is fire, right?
Consumes turns it into fuel.
But that's what great athletes do.
They turn adversity into opportunities,
into a platform for performance that takes
or breath the way.
You can check out this of Morphati Medallion
at dailystart.com slash AF.
We have a cool pendant as well.
Morphati, it's a motto for life.
It's why I carry this reminder with me.
And I think you like it.
Epic Teed says, it's not that you read.
It's what you read.
I'd add to that.
It's how you read.
How you develop a reading practice.
Reading is in about impressing people
or crossing things off the list.
It's not the mental gymnastics.
It's about getting better.
It's about filtering this information, retaining it, ultimately applying it, using it in the
pursuit of what the Stokes would call the good life.
That's what we're going to talk about today.
Seven Stoke tips for being a better reader.
I think you're really going to like these.
This is a fun, breezy episode.
And if you really want to invest in your reading practice, check out the Daily Stoke Read
to Lead Challenge, which we just expanded and added a whole bunch of awesome stuff to.
You can check that out at dailystoke.com slash reading.
And I'll link to that in today's episode show page.
My rule is I want to read books that have changed people's lives, one, and two, those
tend to be older books, right?
Books that have stood the test of time.
And I know this is crazy as someone who puts out new books, but I have a bias towards
old books, books that have stood the test of time that were relevant 100 years ago, a
thousand years ago.
Books that have stood the test of time are likely going to hold up in the future and you
won't have wasted your time reading them.
So that you wanna read is great,
but it matters what you read and how you read.
You say you don't have time to read,
but you're watching this video.
You do have time, you're just choosing not to make time.
There are people way busier than you.
Marcus Aurelius made time to read.
Epictetus was a slave he managed to read.
You have time to read.
You just have to make time to read.
I read a lot.
I promise I am almost certainly busier than you.
I make time for it.
If you want to read, you have to make time for it.
It's not that we have a little bit of time,
Seneca says.
It's that we waste a lot of it.
And you're wasting it right now, put the phone down,
and go read.
If you want to read, then do it, make the time.
I've always seen reading as my job,
and if something's gonna be my job,
I wanna figure out how to get good at it,
and I'm gonna figure out how to improve it.
And the Stoics obviously talk about this.
Reading was a practice.
It was something they tried to be very good at. And if you wanna learn everything the Stoics obviously talked about this. Reading was a practice. It was something they tried to be very good at.
And if you wanna learn everything the Stoics can teach you
about how to be a better reader,
I recommend the Read to Lead Challenge
that we built here at Daily Stoic.
It's a guide to a Stoic reading practice,
how to read like Marcus Relius,
Seneca Epiptidus.
Yes, a little bit like me.
You can sign up right now by going to DailyStoke.com slash reading.
It's all the best stoke practices for reading. It's live Q&A's with me and a bunch of other
awesome stuff. I'd love for you to sign up. It's the most popular challenge we've done here at
DailyStoke. For 10,000 people have signed up since we launched it a couple years ago. I'd
love to have you join us. Join me. We'll become better readers together. You can sign up at dailystoke.com slash reading, or click the link below.
[♪ Music playing in background,
playing in background,
playing in background,
in meditation's markets really says that just as reading
and writing require a master so does life.
Now that's obviously true, but let's go to the first part.
He's saying to be a great reader,
you have to have a master, someone who tutors you,
who advises you, for Eisenhower,
as a young, a military officer, a fox conner, his mentor,
begins to pick out and direct a course of reading
shapes his life that makes him
one of the great generals and presidents of all time.
Marcus really, himself, is introduced to the works
of Epictetus, through rusticus,
his life is changed by this reading master,
this person who's instructing him and reading. And actually some of the only letters we have
from Mark's realist come from his rhetoric teacher, Fronto, who also directs the course of reading.
So the question is, who is leading you, who is teaching you, who is introducing you to new books,
who is your master in reading and writing, you don't have one, you
should get one.
General James Maddow says that if you haven't read hundreds of books, you're functionally
illiterate, which I think is a great way to think about it.
It's not just that you've read some stuff, it's not just that you can read, but have you read
very, very deeply about what it is that you do for a living, about
who it is that you're trying to be.
It's not one book, it's not two books, it's not ten books, it's hundreds of books.
If you haven't read hundreds of books, you may well be literate, but you are functionally
illiterate, and that's what really matters.
You shouldn't just read, you should always be rereading.
The still I'd say we never step in the same river twice because we change and the river
is always changing.
But this is true for books too.
Yes, the words on the page are the same, but the circumstances in which you are reading
them, who you are when you're reading them, that's changed.
So don't just read, reread, and reread again.
Senaqa says that we linger on the works of the Master Thinkers.
We read them over and over and over again,
and we get something new out of it every time,
especially when you reread meditations.
Seneca, epictetus.
Don't just read the stokes, but re-read the stokes
and grow each time you do.
Maybe you're reading too much.
I know that sounds crazy.
Obviously, one of the virtues of stosism is the virtue of wisdom, but multiple times in
meditations Marcus tells himself to throw away his books, get active in life's
purpose while he can. And I think that's advice, that's advice I try to give
myself. I love reading, I love retreating to the world of ideas, but Marcus
Realizes mentor Fronto. He says, against your will, you must
put on the purple cloak of the emperor. Meaning, you can't stay here with your books, you can't
retreat to the ivory tower. You have to go out in the world and live these ideas, apply these ideas,
struggle with difficult people, struggle with difficult challenges, apply this stuff in the
imperfect world. Marcus says, don't go around expecting Plato's Republic
because you live here in the real world
and that's where we apply the philosophy.
We stop arguing about what good people are
and we try to be one, we try to apply the philosopher
in real life where it belongs.
One of the things I was actually tied
into what I wanted to ask you next
is a Truman was a huge reader.
He was obsessed with Marcus Aurelia. He writes in one of the things that actually ties into what I wanted to ask you next is the Truman was a huge reader. You know, he was obsessed with Marcus Aureliate. He writes in one of his letters, you know,
the sort of virtues of wisdom and courage and justice and temperance. You know, he learned that
from the sort of the education that he gave himself. He's one of the last presidents to not go to
college. And so I wondered what you thought of that famous quote from Truman. You know, he said,
And so I wondered what you thought of that famous quote from Truman. You know, he said, not all readers are leaders, but all leaders are readers.
And that strikes me as something very true about your life as well.
The value of quotient of reading for me was probably different in Truman's.
But in the moments that quiet during the day when I think back about my life and reading and so forth. I find the early origin of about reading came from my grandma.
When I was a little boy, my grandma used to make me sit and watch her cook in the kitchen.
My grandma never got past eighth grade, but she had common sense.
So she would make me sit there and watch her cook. And so it turned out, as I realized in my adult life,
it was a classroom.
She was teaching me how to cook by observation.
And then she would have conversations with me
why I was sitting there.
And so one time she said to me, she said, George,
she said, you know, back in the days of slavery, the plantation owners used
to hide their money in books. And I said, Grandma, why did they do that? She said, because they knew
the slaves couldn't read, so they would never take the books down.
To me, the moral of that story was,
as long as someone can control your mind,
they can control your body.
And so I think that was the early revelation to me.
Books had to be more relevant in my life and and then I thought to realize
you've got a moral obligation to read that people die to get you the right to read.
If you remember your history, George, there was a time in America when it was illegal for a person to teach a black person how to read.
There was a time in America when a black person could not get a library card.
The libraries were segregated.
People died to get me the right to read.
Am I going to dishonor their deaths?
I'm not reading. I see it in a broader
context than just reading to learn or reading for entertainment. I feel personally I have an
obligation to honor those people's death. They die so that I could have the opportunity to read and people asked me when you were growing up did you read
a lot? Hell no. The only books I saw in my young life were school books. That
were the only books I knew. When I was growing up as a young kid and washed a
DC 7, 8, 9, 10 years old, every day was about survival. When you got up in the morning,
you were happy that you survived for another day.
And so you get up in the morning
and you look out the window and the tip toe stands
and you say, I made it another day,
but it was all about survival.
And so along the way, I continued to progress
to where I finally get a basketball scholarship
to go and over. It really wasn't until I got to go and over that I started to
realize the wonder of reading it and how it could separate you from other people.
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