The Daily Stoic - Does It Measure Up? | Philosophy As Medicine Of The Soul
Episode Date: January 31, 2025You want to achieve. You want to leave your mark on the universe. You want to conquer the world.🎥 Watch 9 Stoic Lessons From Iron Maiden on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tdPCjKW...z8dISince we received such great feedback from the launch of 2025's New Year New You Challenge, we decided to RE-OPEN the challenge for February. Head over to dailystoic.com/challenge today to sign up.📔 Pick up your own leather bound signed edition of The Daily Stoic! Check it out at the Daily Stoic Store: https://store.dailystoic.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.
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When I travel with my family, I almost always stay in an Airbnb. I want my kids to have their own
room. I want my wife and I to have a little privacy. You know, maybe we'll cook or at the
very least we'll use a refrigerator. Sometimes I'm bringing my in-laws around with me or I need an
extra room just to write in. Airbnbs give you the flavor of actually being in the place you are. I feel like
I've lived in all these places that I've stayed for a week or two or even a night
or two. There's flexibility in size and location. When you're searching you can
look at guest favorites or even find like historical or really coolest things.
It's my choice when we're traveling as a family. Some of my favorite memories are
in Airbnb's we've stayed at.
I've recorded episodes of a podcast in Airbnb.
I've written books.
One of the very first Airbnbs I ever stayed in
was in Santa Barbara, California,
while I was finishing up what was my first book,
Trust Me I'm Lying.
If you haven't checked it out,
I highly recommend you check out Airbnb for your next trip.
recommend you check out Airbnb for your next trip. Welcome to the Daily Stoic Podcast.
On Friday, we do double duty, not just reading our daily meditation, but also reading a passage
from the Daily Stoic, my book, 366 Meditations on Wisdom, Perseverance in the Art of Living,
which I wrote with my wonderful collaborator, translator,
and literary agent, Stephen Hanselman.
So today we'll give you a quick meditation from the Stoics
with some analysis from me,
and then we'll send you out into the world
to turn these words into works.
Does it measure up? You want to do big things.
You want to achieve.
You want to leave your mark on the universe.
You want to conquer the world.
This is what Alexander the Great did literally and yet, where did it get him?
Marcus Aurelius took pains to remind himself that the man died and was buried like the rest of us.
The band Iron Maid, my favorite, of course, has a wonderful lyric,
measure your coffin, does it measure up to your lust.
As it happens, there's a much older poem from Juvenal writing sometime in the second century
AD who pointed out that in life, while the world was not big enough for Alexander's ambition,
in death a coffin was sufficient.
No one is saying you should put all your drive aside that you should not try to do anything.
Clearly, Marcus Willis tried to be a good person, tried to be a good ruler, tried to
be a good philosopher, tried to be a good writer.
But that's the point.
He measured his life not by the size of the monument he hoped they would leave to him,
and there are some, but instead by the things he measured his life not by the size of the monument he hoped they would leave to him, and there are some, but instead by the things he controlled.
In the end, it's not about the size of the empire you build or the monuments left behind.
It's about the character you shape, the actions you control, the impact you make on those
who matter most.
Aim high, but remember your legacy isn't about the greatness of
your ambition. It's measured in how you live each day. And of course I am an
Iron Maiden nerd so I'm always looking for ways to tie this into one of my
favorite heavy metal bands. I did a video a couple months ago about some stoic
lessons from Iron Maiden which you can check out on the Daily Stoic YouTube
channel. I'll link to that. And we've also got a bunch of other awesome videos. We're spending a lot of time and energy
building out the YouTube stuff these days. So check that out at youtube.com slash Daily Stoic.
Hey, it's Ryan. Welcome to another episode of the Daily Stoic Podcast, the last day in January.
It sneaks up on you, doesn't it?
Felt like it was just December,
looking forward to Christmas, then a new year,
and then you're already, you know,
at 12th of the way through the new year.
That's how it goes.
And I guess it's how it's always gone.
Today's entry is entitled,
The Philosophy as Medicine of the Soul.
Again, this is from Daily Stoic,
366 Meditations on Wisdom, Perseverance,
and the Art of Living written by yours truly,
but really written by the Stoics themselves
because we have a quote from Marcus Aurelius'
Meditations here, 5.9.
Don't return to philosophy as a taskmaker,
but as patients seek out relief in a treatment of sore eyes
or dressing for a burn or from an ointment.
Regarding it this way,
you'll obey reason without putting it on display
and rest easy in its care.
You know what's weird?
I always struggled with that quote a little bit
because if you read 5.9 in the Hayes translations,
he says, where is this?
He says, and not to think of philosophy as your instructor,
but as the sponge and egg white that relieve ophthalmia
as a soothing ointment, a warm lotion.
So I was like, what the hell is that?
I'm probably even mispronouncing it now.
So then you flip to the back of meditations and he goes,
he explains what that is, right?
Oh, I guess he doesn't.
I thought he explained it in the footnotes,
but you look it up.
Let's look it up here together, learning together.
Here, let's pronounce it.
Ophthalmia, Google is telling me,
and it is an inflammation of the eye,
especially conjunctivitis.
Oh, okay.
So it's a congestion of the eyeball,
often eye watering, redness, swelling, itching and burning.
Interesting.
I wonder if Marcus actually had that.
It doesn't really have anything to do with the entry.
It's just an extension of the metaphor.
But as I add it in here, I say the busier we get,
the more we work and learn and read,
the further we may drift.
We get in a rhythm, we're making money, being creative,
and we're stimulated and busy.
It seems like everything is going well,
but we drift further and further from philosophy.
Eventually this neglect will contribute to a problem.
The stress builds up, our mind gets cloudy.
We forget what's important, and it can result
in an injury of some kind.
When that happens, it's important that we tap the brakes, put aside all the momentum
in the moment and return to the regimen and the practices that we know are rooted in clarity
and good judgment and good principles and good health in the truer sense.
Stoicism is designed to be medicine for the soul.
It relieves us of the vulnerabilities of modern life.
It restores us with the vigor we need to thrive in life.
We should check in today and let it do its healing.
I guess this kind of ties into what I was saying,
which is like, you're like,
oh shit, January is over already, right?
And soon enough you'd be like, oh, it's spring already?
Oh, it's almost summer, school's about to be out.
Gotta figure out what we're doing.
Then the end of summer creeps up.
You get in your rhythm, you lose track of time,
sometimes for positive reasons,
sometimes for not so positive reasons,
and you drift from philosophy.
I go, oh, it's been a while since I picked up meditations,
or oh, it's been a while since I read anything new
from the Stoics, or that I challenged myself in some philosophical way. I'm drifting from these principles. And
it's helpful to come back to it, that it's always there. That's what it's there for.
There's a passage where Seneca talks about, he says, you know what philosophy offers?
Philosophy offers counsel, right? It's there to walk you through what you are going through
because human beings have gone through that
for a very long time.
It's not new.
And in fact, the Stokes,
some of the smartest people who ever lived,
not just the Stokes,
but the people influenced by them who came after,
Montaigne, Pascal, Stockdale, right?
They thought about how to apply this stuff.
They made it more practical and accessible.
They added insights on top of it.
We can learn from their specific,
perhaps slightly more relatable
and modern instances with this thing.
And that's what philosophy is there for.
And I want you to come back to it today,
however far you've drifted,
however your January has gotten off,
whether it's gotten off to a great start
or a not so great start.
That's what today's message is about.
You wanna see philosophy as an instructor, right?
As a source of relief, as a source of solace,
as a kind of treatment for whatever it is that ills you. And then just
speaking of the year ending, if you missed out on the New Year New You Challenge, if January got
away from you a little bit and you want to come back to philosophy, you want to kick off February
with some Stoicism, we're running the Daily Stoic New Year New You Challenge again,
21 Days of stoic inspired challenges
to get you back on track.
You can sign up right now at dailystoic.com slash challenge.
Really proud of this one.
I got a lot out of doing it.
Bedtimes, you know, I've stuck with my sit ups
and push ups habit that's been going well.
I picked the big book that I'm gonna read for the year.
Like this big intellectual project
I'm gonna sort of struggle with.
So I got a bunch of stuff out of the challenge.
I think you will too.
Thousands of stoics all over the world did, and you can sign up for that at dailystoic.com
slash challenge, but it's going to close tomorrow.
So it's your last chance and I hope to see you in there.
Thanks so much for listening to the Daily Stoic Podcast.
If you don't know this, you can get these delivered to you via email every day. Check it out at dailystoic.com slash email.
If you like The Daily Stoic and thanks for listening, you can listen early and ad free right now by joining Wondery Plus in the Wondery app or on Apple podcasts.
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Wondery.com slash survey.
New year, new resolutions.
And this year on the best idea yet podcast, we're revealing the untold origin stories of the products you're obsessed with.
And we promise you have never heard these before.
Ever wonder how the iconic Reese's peanut butter cup was invented?
Cause it was by accident.
HB Reese, a former frog salesman,
stumbled upon the idea after accidentally
burning a batch of peanuts.
Classic.
Proving that sometimes our best ideas arise
from what seemed like our biggest mistakes.
And Jack, did you know there's a scientific explanation
why humans crave that surprising combo
of peanut butter and chocolate?
I didn't, but it sounds delicious.
It is delicious.
So, if you're looking to get inspired
and creative this year, tune in to The Best Idea Yet.
You can find us on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts.
And if you're looking for more podcasts to help you start this year off right, check
out New Year New Mindset on the Wondery app.
Who knows, your next great idea could be an accident that you burned.
This is Nick.
And this is Jack.
And we'll see you on The Best Idea Yet.