The Daily Stoic - Do Not Miss This Reminder | This Single Word Will Give You Back Your Life
Episode Date: March 5, 2024Spring is the most beautiful of the seasons. Suddenly, after a dreary winter, the colors come back. The birds are out. The days last longer. The breeze is light and the air is cool.But as Phi...llip Larkin’s bittersweet poem reminds us, beneath this turning of the seasons is a kind of darkness.The trees are coming into leafLike something almost being said;The recent buds relax and spread,Their greenness is a kind of griefThe inherent grief is the passage of time. Each season brings new life, yes, but also marks the cessation of life. It’s a painful truth, the poem points out, written in the rings of the tree. Winter is dead and over…and all of us a little more so too.This notion serves as a gentle nudge, reminding us of the preciousness of every moment. It urges us not merely to exist but to truly live, to seize each season and extract its full potential. It’s saying don’t let a new season come and go without springing forward with it—not just meeting it, but making something of it. If you’re up for that, why don’t you spring forward with us and the Daily Stoic Spring Forward Challenge?Interested in Daily Stoic Life? Click here.✉️ 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 and how we can apply them in our
actual lives.
Thanks for listening, and I hope you enjoy.
Don't miss this reminder.
Spring is the most beautiful of the seasons.
Suddenly after a dreary winter, the colors come back, the birds are out, the days last
longer, the breeze is light and the air is cool.
But as Philip Larkin's bittersweet poem reminds us, beneath this turning of seasons is a kind
of darkness.
As the poem goes, the trees are coming into leaf like something almost being said.
The recent buds relax and spread.
Their greenness is kind of grief.
The inherent message is about the passage of time.
Each season brings new life, yes, but also marks the sensation of life.
It's a painful truth.
It's a painful truth, the poem says,
that's written in the rings of a tree.
Winter is dead and over,
and all of us a little more so too.
This notion serves as a gentle nudge,
reminding us of the preciousness of every moment.
It urges us not merely to exist,
but to truly live, to seize each season
and extract its full potential,
which is what we mean when we say here at Daily Stoic
that it's time to spring forward.
If you did our New Year, New You challenge,
you heard us talking about that back in December.
Well, we've got a new one for you.
It's called the Daily Stoic Spring Forward Challenge.
This is the time of year where, you know,
we're talking about spring cleaning.
It's worth pondering how often do we organize not just our physical spaces, but our minds,
our routines, and our assumptions as well. Even if you just reflect on the last week,
how many of those seven days were efficient and as productive as they could have been?
Or did you find yourself wasting time over complicating things and falling back on old
habits? Or are you, like many others others still feeling the lingering effects of winter's inertia?
Well, the Daily Stokes Spring Forward Challenge is designed to prompt introspection into those
aspects of your life to help you scrutinize your choices, your relationships and your
habits and help propel you towards a life of fulfillment.
As Mark's really said, this is what you deserve. You could be good today, but instead you choose tomorrow.
So the choice is yours.
Are you gonna let your New Year's resolutions
fade into missed opportunities
and continue with the status quo?
Or could you invest 10 days into self-improvement,
create some runway for some genuine last and change,
challenge yourself with me and thousands of other strokes,
all over the world
to spring forward and become the person you inspire to be. And you can sign up right now at DailyStoic.com slash spring. I'll see you in there. We're going to do a bunch of awesome stuff,
some Q&As with me, some great lessons, all kinds of great thinking on how to spring forward,
grab this next season and get the most out of it.
And I'd love to see you join us, dailystoic.com slash spring.
And you can also join Daily Stoic Life
if you've been thinking about doing that
and get this challenge and all the other challenges
we're doing for the rest of the year,
plus a bunch of other awesome stuff for free.
And you can do that at dailystoiclife.com.
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You can't sacrifice your life and your time to meet some arbitrary standards. We should be really
clear about what we are willing to do and what we aren't willing to do.
Everything you say yes to is saying no to something else.
It's a pretty simple word, but it's actually one of the hardest ones in the world for people to say.
One of the absolute hardest things to do in life is saying no.
We don't like doing it, we don't like hurting people's feelings.
We like saying yes because we think yes will allow us to do in life is saying no. We don't like doing it. We don't like hurting people's feelings. We like saying yes, because we think yes
will allow us to do more.
Actually, Seneca, marveling at it, he says,
we're able to say it in some contexts
when people want to take our money
or they want to take our property.
But then when it comes to protecting
the most important thing in the world, our time, our life,
the one non-renewable resource there is.
Seneca says it's fascinating, imperatively sad, how bad we are at saying that magic word,
no.
I'm Ryan Holiday.
I've written a number of books about stoic philosophy.
I've spoken about it to everyone from the NBA to the NFL, sitting senators and special
forces leaders.
I wouldn't have been able to do the things that I have done if I hadn't gotten good at saying no.
And you have to get good at saying no.
And in today's episode,
I'm going to give you the best Stoke advice
from Epictetus and Marcus Reles and Seneca
on how to do this very difficult thing,
how to say no,
how to not care what other people think,
and how to focus on what's essential and important. So in my office I have a couple reminders that help me say no.
I have two pictures of my kids here, that's my youngest, that's my oldest, and then in
between I have this picture that the sports psychologist Jonathan Fader sent me.
He's worked with Giants and a bunch of other football and baseball teams. Anyways, he sent me, he's worked with giants and a bunch of other
football and baseball teams.
Anyways, he sent me this picture,
that's Oliver Sacks on the phone in his office.
There's just a giant picture behind Oliver Sacks,
it just says capital N-O,
which is a reminder to say no.
That was my first sort of big reminder about saying no,
and then I've added a few more over the years.
So this, this is a memo from the Truman administration.
Since the president will be out of office
when this celebration will be held,
how do you think we should answer it?
Should we say that because of many similar requests,
the president must ask to be excused?
And then Truman underlines it and he wrote,
the proper response is underlined
and then that's Truman's handwriting HST.
So that's a memo from the Truman administration.
And then this is one from Truman out of office July 7th, 1969, thanking someone who mailed him something. Obviously his
secretary again would have written that out. And then he says, I regret that I cannot comply with
your request. It has been long my policy not to respond to questions. I received so many requests
similar to yours that I could not begin to keep up with all of them. I know you will understand.
And like, look, in the early days, I used to get the daily Stoke email replies directly to yours that I could not begin to keep up with all of them, I know you will understand. And like, look, in the early days,
I used to get the daily Stoke email replies directly to me.
I used to post my email address on my website.
I would respond to inquiries that came in
on the comments section on social media posts.
I would answer my DMs.
And I felt good, I'll hear from people who go,
eight years ago, I asked you this question
about whether I should take this job or this job.
And I answered and it helped them. I loved that. It means a lot to me, but I've had to realize that
saying yes, answering even just short questions takes away from something, right? Every thing you
say yes to is saying no to something else. And so I've had to realize that I can't be as accessible
or open as it used to be, and I have to say no. And then I have one more actually that someone set me as a gift.
This is in a different part of my office.
Here's another Truman one.
So Truman isn't just saying no because he's a jerk
and he doesn't want to listen or talk to people, right?
He still feels obligated to try to help people,
which of course I do.
This is March 3rd, 1954.
It says, dear Mr. Taylor, your question will be answered
in the book.
I am getting ready to publish as soon as possible.
So the point is, if I want to be of the same service
that I was before, which I do,
I've just had to figure out ways to scale that, right?
Because if I answer every random question
or I say yes to everything that comes my way,
what I'm doing, and this is why I have it here,
is I'm saying no to these two people
who I've already promised so much of my time to.
Or I'm saying no to this, which is my writing, which is not only the thing that is most meaningful
to me, not only is it how I make my actual living, but it's how I can help the most people.
So the inability to say no to one random person, I'm also saying no to a lot more people
by taking that time and energy away from my rent.
So I think it's good to have little reminders
of why you have to say no.
And look, Memento Mori is a reminder like that too, right?
You only have so much time, you only have so much life.
If you say yes to everyone and everything,
you're gonna wake up one day
and wonder where all your time went.
There's a story about Antoninus, whose Marx realist predecessor has adopted stepfather, the man that Marcus admires more than any other. All the Roman emperors before Antoninus and after
were extensive travelers. They toured the wide expanse of the Roman Empire. They made these big imperial visits,
visiting the territories, events for throne in their honor.
They inspected the troops.
For his 20-odd year reign, Antoninus basically never leaves Rome.
Now, why?
Does he never leave Rome because he's a homebody,
because he was scared to travel?
I don't think it's any of that.
What they said was he knew what it cost
for the emperor to travel,
not just what it cost the imperial treasury, but what it cost for the emperor to travel, not just what it cost the imperial treasury,
but what it cost these little cities and towns, the dignitaries, the troops. He knew what it cost
to entertain the emperor. He knew what an imposition it was. And so when we're thinking about what we're
saying yes and no to, it's not just, hey, what's going to cost me, what it's going to take out of me,
what's going to go into this. It's also, hey, what are the effects of what I'm about to say yes or no to on other people? I
have to think about this. If I am agreeing to everything that's coming in, I am
likely only gonna be doing the fun parts of that, the fulfilling parts about that,
even the rewarding parts about this. But other people have to handle the paperwork,
other people have to handle paying the taxes, other people have to do the
coordination, other people have to make sure I get there.
It goes well, all that, right?
So we can't just think, oh, do I have the bandwidth for this?
Is this fun for me?
I also don't just think, hey, what do I want to do or not?
I'd like to stay home.
I don't want to necessarily put it
soccer practices or soccer games.
As we think about it in terms of my family,
it's not just my preferences,
but how does this fit into the larger whole
or the larger system?
So as you're thinking about yes or no, I really like this idea of the empathy that Antoninus is practicing there.
He's not just thinking about what is this for me, what am I trying to accomplish.
He's also checking it against how the consequences of that yes or no affects other people.
affects other people.
There is a section in Pressfield's book, the Daily Pressfield, that I really like.
He actually dedicated this book to me, which is pretty awesome. He has a whole section in the book called You Can't Be a Pro If You Can't Say No.
It's only an hour, an ask too far. I don't take a piss without getting paid. No more Mr. Nice Guy.
Clueless asks. He says,. Nice Guy, clueless asks.
He says, I turned down all clueless asks.
How do I define that term?
Anyone who sends me their manuscript unsolicited.
Anyone who asks me to meet them for lunch.
Anyone who sends me an email headed high or hello there.
Anyone who asked me how to get an agent.
Anyone who asked me to introduce them to my agent.
These are not malicious asks.
The writers who send them are not bad people.
They're just clueless.
He says, don't ask a writer how to get an agent.
Find out yourself.
Do your due diligence.
Learn a good manner.
The point is part of being a pro
is figuring stuff out for yourself.
It's not imposing on others.
And conversely, being a pro, staying a pro
is having good boundaries.
Pressfield's point is that the resistance
is happy to indulge all the things that could distract you.
The resistance wants to say yes to everything.
It wants to be a people pleaser,
because then it means it doesn't have to do
the hard thing, right?
My main thing, which is sitting here doing my work,
writing the daily Stoic emails, taking care of my family.
The resistance wants to suck you away from your main thing,
and it does it by getting you sucked into doing
a bunch of things that are not your main thing.
["The Last Song of the Year"]
In the time of Nero, a philosopher goes to the house
of a stoic named Egyrpanus, and he says,
"'Hey, I've been asked to attend this party
"'that Nero's throwing on.
"'We all know Nero is awful and corrupt and evil,
"'but I got invited, I know you got invited. I'm wondering
whether I should go or not. I'm thinking about it, you know, should I go? And Agrippinus says,
yes, you should go. And the guy says, why? You're not going. And he says, yeah, but I didn't even
think about going. He was basically saying that this guy was hemming and hawing about it, meant
that he would already screwed up. His point was that the guy was wavering, he'd already sort of
compromised his conscience by even thinking of going. To me, Agrippinus is
also expressing some of the wisdom behind a rule that's become more popular
now. I know Mark Manson has talked about it, this sort of hell yes or hell no rule.
His point is Agrippinus wasn't, ah, do I want you, do I not? He wouldn't even
consider doing something like that, would be so Compromising or corruptive. He didn't even think about attending one of Nero's parties to to put in
Appearances or to kiss the ring. It was no not gonna happen
He had a clear line about what he would and wouldn't do and I think this is important as we think about what we say
Yes or no to life is complicated
I think he's he's saying this for effect, a tad,
and so is the hell yes, hell no thing.
But the idea is we should be really clear
about what we are willing to do
and what we aren't willing to do,
the things we accept and the things we don't accept.
We should have a clear sense of our moral compass,
also our priorities.
So we're not hemming and hawing.
We're not having to ask for advice.
Not even thinking about it.
It's a hard pass or it's an enthusiastic guess.
Actually, Ramit Sethi said this to me once.
He said, you don't owe anyone a response.
And his point was that, you know,
just because an unsolicited email comes in
doesn't mean you have to reply to that person.
Of course, RSVPs are polite and considerate, but if you feel sort of overwhelmed by all
the inbound, you have to understand you can't sacrifice your life and your time to meet some
arbitrary standard, some arbitrary sense you have of what being caught up is or isn't.
There was a time early in my life when I believed in inbox zero and that plan
has had to get abandoned as I've gotten older and more successful because I value other
things.
Of course, again, I want to reply and there are people I do get back quickly to, but I've
had to realize that the preconceived notion I have of what being caught up is actually
preventing me from getting caught up on what's truly important.
Eisenhower has that decision matrix about what's urgent and what's important.
And sometimes the things that come in, the inbound inquiries, they feel important, but
actually they're just urgent.
And as you're tackling them, what you're ignoring is what's actually important, not necessarily
urgent.
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