The Daily Stoic - Don’t Let It Change You | How To Actually Be Happier In 2024 (According to the Stoics)
Episode Date: February 13, 2024So eventually a group of corrupt Romans contrived to have Cato assigned to a posting in Cyprus, a veritable hotbed of misdeeds and sin. It was a place where politicians got rich, where they h...ad fun, where they lived the colonial high life. “You will come back from there a far more agreeable man and more tame,” one of them predicted to Cato. They weren’t trying to bribe him, they just wanted to expose him to how things were supposed to be done. They wanted him to get a taste.This was what Marcus Aurelius was warning about in Meditations where he talked about “imperialization,” about being stained purple, about being “Caesarified.” The status quo doesn’t like people who buck it. No, the status quo contrives to apply pressure and persuasion on us, to get us to go along. It tries to change us, tries to lead us away from those pesky virtues of courage and temperance and justice and wisdom.If you want to learn more about Cato, the Stoics all other Stoics admired, the man that George Washington made his hero, check out our video: 5 Stoic Secrets from the Man of Principle (Cato the Younger). We also dedicate a whole chapter to Cato in Lives of the Stoics (signed copies 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 let it change you.
Cato was too good for his own good, some Romans thought.
He didn't take bribes, he didn't cook the books, he wasn't motivated by ego.
And worse, he seemed to expect others should follow this same moral code.
They didn't want to.
We can't all be Cato's when the, usually said with a shrug before someone did
the wrong thing.
So eventually a group of corrupt Romans contrived to have Cato assigned to a posting in Cyprus,
a veritable hotbed of misdeeds and sin.
It was a place where politicians got rich, where they had fun, where they lived the
high colonial life.
You will come back from there a far more agreeable man and more tame, one of them predicted the Cato. They weren't trying to bribe him,
they just wanted to expose him to how things were supposed to be done.
They wanted him to get a taste. This is what Marcus Aurelius was warning about
in meditations where he talked about imperialization,
being stained purple, about being caesareified. The status quote isn't like
people who buck it. No, the status quo contrives to apply pressure
and persuasion on us to get us to go along.
It tries to change us, tries to lead us away
from these pesky virtues of courage and temperance
and justice and wisdom.
We have to be strong like Cata.
We have to resist.
We have to come back as he did the same person
we were when we left.
We have to keep fighting to be the person that philosophy wants us to be.
And by the way, we have a really good video and a really good podcast episode
all about Cato. If you want to learn more about him,
you can check out five Stoic secrets from the man of principle. I'll link to that.
And of course, I have a chapter all about Dear Cato in lives of the Stoics. So check that out also.
of a chapter all about Dear Cato in Lives of the Stokes. So check that out also.
I remember very specifically,
I rented an Airbnb in Santa Barbara.
I was driving from San Francisco to Los Angeles.
I just sold my first book and I'd been working on it
and I just needed a break and needed to get away
and I needed to have some quiet time to write.
And that was one of the first Airbnb's I ever started with. And then when,
when the book came out and did well, I bought my first house,
I would rent that house out during South by Southwest and F one and other events
in Austin. Maybe you've been in a similar place.
You've stayed in an Airbnb and you thought to yourself,
this actually seems pretty doable. Maybe my place could be an Airbnb.
You could rent a spare bedroom. You could rent your whole place when you're away. Maybe you're planning a ski getaway this winter
or you're planning on going somewhere warmer.
While you're away, you could Airbnb your home
and make some extra money towards the trip.
Whether you use the extra money to cover some bills
or for something a little more fun,
your home could be worth more than you think.
Find out how much at Airbnb.ca slash host.
Mark Serrilli says that ambition is tying your wellbeing
to what other people say and do.
It says sanity is tying it to your own actions.
I don't want everything to happen
the way that it will happen.
Very little is needed for the happy life.
It's all within yourself.
There's this image that the Stokes were unfeeling
and unfun that they sort of shove everything down, that they're joyless, which couldn't be further from the truth.
When people think of Stoicism, I think the last thing they think is happiness.
I think to the Stoics, happiness was also the removal of destructive emotions, things
like envy or fear or avarice or aggression or ambition.
I'm Ryan Holiday.
I've not only written now 10 books about Stoke philosophy, but I'm a real human
being for whom happiness is important.
Aristotle talks about happiness as you diamond the human flourishing.
I think that's the place that stoicism is trying to get you.
And so in today's episode, we're going to talk about some stoic strategies for
happiness. Does it mean exuberant excitement and pleasure?
That's not what the Stoics thought of happiness as.
We're gonna talk about strategies for Stoic happiness,
what that looked like for Stoics.
What is the number one source of our unhappiness?
It's focusing on things that we don't control.
It's we're worried about this, we're anxious about that.
We're hoping that this will happen or that that won't happen.
We basically take our chance at happiness and we hand it over to random
events. And this is where the key, essentially the premise of stoicism comes
in. Epic Tita says the chief task in life is to separate things into two buckets.
What's in my control and what's not in my control.
And it is the only way to happiness is to cease worrying about things which are beyond
my power of control.
So when you narrow your focus from the things that everyone thinks about, from the things
that everyone worries about, from all the things that are outside your grasp and you
decide to focus instead on what's up to me, you have a much better chance of being happy.
Voltaire said,
the most important choice you make each day
is to be in a good mood.
Your mood is something you control.
If you decide, hey, I'm gonna be in a good mood today,
you have a much better chance of being happy
than the person who wakes up and says,
well, I hope everything goes right today.
And if I get everything that I want,
and if nothing bad happens,
and if everyone's nice to me,
then I can be happy, then I can be happy.
Then I can have fun. That is not a recipe for day-to-day dependable happiness. But look,
for the Stoics, ultimately what's in our control is our thoughts and our actions.
Everything else is up to someone else. Marcus Aurelius says, you have power over your mind,
not events. He says, realize this and you will find strength. But I would say realize this and also you will find happiness.
Not just resilience, not just the ability to muddle through,
but to say, again, I control my mood.
I control what I'm gonna do about this.
I control this little window of stuff today
and I'm just gonna crush it there.
That's where I'm gonna focus.
And because I'm focused there,
I know I can make myself happy.
And what I think is one of the best passages
in all of meditations, but certainly the most illustrative,
Marcus realizes the fruit of this life is good character
and acts for the common good.
I think if we're shortening that to a mantra,
we'd say good character acts for the common good,
or good character, good deeds, meaning that you work on yourself, of course, that's a huge, we'd say, good character acts for the common good. Or good character, good deeds.
Meaning that you work on yourself, of course, that's a huge part of stoicism, but it's
also about what you do for others, whether you're being a positive difference maker
in the world.
Marx really refers to the common good, something like 80 times in meditations.
And so it's really important that we don't see stoicism as this, simply this interior
philosophy.
It's about perfecting the self or working on the self so one can make a bigger difference
in the world.
That's the motto that I think you want to try to live by every single day.
You want to say to yourself in every situation, what am I doing for others?
If you want more tranquility, more happiness, Marcus Rihla says you have to do less.
You have to say no more.
When you eliminate the inessential,
the stokes say you get this double benefit
of doing the essential things better.
That word less, that's been my word of the year for my wife and I.
Less stuff, less commitments, less travel, less drama, less wasted time.
Our goal is to eliminate the
inessential things so we can do
the essential things better.
So should you.
People think money will make them happy,
which of course it doesn't.
Although up to a point,
money can contribute to your happiness.
But generally, people think if I'm wealthier,
I will be happier.
Well, I'll tell you how you can become wealthier right now.
It's by wanting less stuff, by needing less.
Seneca says poverty is not being poor,
poverty is wanting more.
And he's not being flippie,
he's not trying to say that some struggling mother
on welfare does not have it hard.
What he's saying is that there are rich people
who are very poor,
and they're poor because they're comparing themselves
to other people.
He says they're poor because they're greedy, because they're insatiable, because they think when they
get a million more dollars or a billion more dollars or maybe it has nothing to do with money,
maybe it's when they win another Super Bowl, when they get this other thing, then they will be happy.
Right? So they, again, by focusing on something they don't control, right? Something that's in
the future, they've deprived themselves of happiness right now.
So your wants and your happiness are in attention with each other.
So if you can decide to be grateful and satisfied and good with what you have now, you have
a certain amount of wealth and you have something to be happy for.
Mark's really says, look, we want all this other stuff, but we forget that if we lost
what we had right now, we'd be sad.
Also if we didn't have it, but someone gave it right now, we'd be sad. Also, if we didn't have it,
but someone gave it to us, we'd be grateful, right?
So I think wanting less and being grateful for what you have
is a great way to produce happiness now.
Epictetus says, wealth is not having many possessions,
it's having few wants.
And again, what do you control?
You control the want part of things
more than you control how much you had.
You can't base your happiness on external approval because the Stokes would say it is
firmly outside our dichotomy of control. It's not up to us. Marx really says that ambition is tying
your well-being to what other people say and do, meaning don't control it, meaning they can take it away from you, they can reject you, they can deprive you of it.
It says, sanity is tying it to your own actions.
You have to have the internal compass that says to yourself, I'm doing good work.
What I'm doing matters. This is the right thing. This is success.
You have to define that for yourself. You can't let other people do it,
because then you've handed over your happiness, your wealth, everything to somebody else.
The central idea of stoicism is that adversity is unavoidable. It is a fact of
life. The future is uncertain. Actually, the future is certain. Things are going to
go wrong. Things are going to be difficult, you're going to face challenge. That's what the Stoics knew firsthand. That was the central fact
of existence to them. There was nothing we could do to make it go away, they said, but
we could prepare ourselves, we could strengthen ourselves, we could be ready for that to happen.
Epic地 that the whole point of philosophy is to get to a place where whatever happens,
you're able to say, this is what I trained for.
So the Stoics were always challenging themselves, mentally, physically,
spiritually.
They were seeking out difficult experiences, trying to, to get out of their
comfort zone, to prepare for what could happen.
There was a Stoic, his name was Chrysippus, and he's supposedly one of the only
people to ever die of laughter.
Do you believe that's possible?
I think Chrysippus had a heart attack
or was doing whatever synthetic drug was around then
and had a good old laugh that tipped it off.
You never laughed so hard that you thought you could die?
No.
The joke partly survives to us.
So apparently he was like sitting on his front porch and a donkey walks up and he starts
eating out of the garden and the person, you know, rushes up to get their donkey and he
says, um, does your donkey want some wine to wash down those figs?
And then he starts laughing at his own joke and he laughs so hard that he kills over and
dies.
So it's kind of the ultimate,
like you had to be there, because it makes no sense.
Okay, Crescipus, I know what happened.
Okay.
Because that joke is bad.
Yes.
That's not a-
He's tired of embarrassment?
That's not a joke, is what that is.
First of all, let me tell you what's happened
in Crescipus' life.
Okay.
Everything is shit.
Okay. Everything is so. Everything is so...
But this is actually my favorite emotion though.
Everything in his life has just exploded
and then crumbled to rubble.
And it was that moment when everything seems like it,
it's just the worst.
And you have that realization that I'm just gonna sit here
and just... There's nothing to be done anymore.
It's all rubble.
And you're sitting in just the grief of it all.
And then something silly happens.
And you know, it takes,
it's like when you laugh after crying a ton,
or you know, you're sitting in your house,
it's been destroyed by a tornado
and something silly happens and everyone laughs.
When you're laughing in the hospital room
after somebody's just died, this is stuff.
All this terrible stuff has happened
and then one more terrible thing happens
and you just start laughing maniacally
at the absurdity of it.
That's exactly what happened to him.
And it was just the dumbest thing.
Somebody maybe right before that had choked on some,
one of somebody he loved choked on wine and died.
And he goes, do you want some wine with that thing?
Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha But it is my favorite emotion is laughter in the midst of despair. And actually there's a thing from Seneca
where he's talking about like life is terrible.
He basically says life is terrible.
You can cry about it or you can laugh at it.
Like take your pick.
Yeah, it is pretty beautiful and cruel all the time.
Don't try to get everything to happen
the way you want it to happen, the Stokes would say.
Try to want everything to happen the way that it it to happen, the Stokes would say.
Try to want everything to happen the way that it will happen.
Epictetus, who said this, what he meant is that stronger your expectations, your desires,
or things to be a certain way, the more likely you are to be disappointed.
It's actually intersex with Eastern philosophy.
Zen Buddhists talk about willful will.
When you have expectations, when you have demands, when you have needs, you're likely
to be disappointed.
If you can live in accordance with nature, the Stokes,
would say if you can accept things as they are,
if you can make yourself in sync with the logos,
you're much more likely to be happy,
and you're much less likely to be disappointed.
Talking about wanting less,
the other path to happiness related to this
is the idea of simplification. Marcus Reales says, ask yourself, is this essential? Because most of what we
want and do and say and get tied up in is not essential. We chase things we don't want.
We chase things we don't actually care about. We make life so much more complicated than
it needs to be. When the Stokes talk about living in accordance with nature, I think part of what they're saying, it's not like literal nature, but it is commenting on how
unnatural and complicated and busy and frenetic most of our lives are. And when you simplify,
when you remove stuff, you get closer to kind of who you're meant to be and how you're meant to be.
I think the pandemic was so powerful in this regard.
And in March of 2020, when life shut down
and suddenly we weren't traveling,
we weren't going to meetings,
we weren't as busy as we have been our whole lives.
We looked around, I mean, my wife and I looked around
our farm and we're like,
I don't think we've ever been here at this time of year
and truly noticed how wonderful it was.
So we found these wild blackberry
bushes in our backyard. We watched more sunsets in a row than we'd ever seen. I found out
at one point that I'd spent 500 consecutive nights in a row with my children. And I could
not have comprehended just how profoundly significant that was, that simplification,
that presence, that routine was to my happiness.
So by simplifying, by removing all the extraneous, the inessential things, I was reminded of
the power and the importance of the essential things.
If you want more happiness in your life, start by removing complexity, particularly unnecessary
complexity. Very little is needed for the
happy life, Marcus Aurelia says. It's all within yourself.
Nobody is more unhappy than the person who's never gone through adversity, Seneca says.
He says because they've never been permitted to prove themselves. That's something I try to
remind myself when stuff gets hard, when I run into a bunch of
obstacles in a row, when it doesn't turn out the way that I want it to go.
I'm going, hey, this is an opportunity.
This is a chance for me to practice the virtues.
That's what the Stoics say.
The obstacle is the way it's a chance to practice virtue, to practice excellence.
But more importantly, it's a chance for me to prove myself, if only to myself.
Yes, of course, I would have liked it to go the way that I wanted it,
and I might feel a little unhappy that it's not that way,
but I'd be more unhappy if I never got this chance,
if I didn't get this practice,
if I didn't get these reps
with things not being the way that I wanted them to be.
So I embrace that opportunity,
I do the practice willingly,
I take the rep and I get better for it,
and ultimately happier for it.
When I wrote The Daily Stoke eight years ago, rep and I get better for it and ultimately happier for it.
When I wrote The Daily Stoic eight years ago, I had this crazy idea that I would just keep it going. The book was 366
meditations, but I write one more every single day and I give it
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