The Daily Stoic - Each One Tells You This | Financial Freedom Won't Set You Free

Episode Date: November 12, 2024

Each yesterday is gone, dead. While there is a little grief, it also presents you an opportunity. a chance to begin afresh. 🗓️ The Daily Stoic Page-A-Day Desk Calendar reminds us of the ...chance to begin afresh with each new day. Pick up your own at store.dailystoic.com. 🎥 Watch the FULL video of Financial Freedom Won't Set You Free (These Stoic Tips Will) on YouTube!✉️ 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)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Wondery Plus subscribers can listen to the daily Stoic early and ad free right now. Just join Wondery Plus in the Wondery app or on Apple podcast. I've been traveling a bunch for the tour that I'm on and I brought my kids and my wife with me when I went to Australia. When I'm going to Europe in November, I'm bringing my in-laws also. So, we're not staying in a hotel. We're staying in an Airbnb. The first Airbnb I stayed in would have been in 2010, I think. I've always loved Airbnb, that flexibility, size, location. You can find something awesome. You want to stay somewhere that other guests have had a positive experience. I love the guest favorites feature that helps you narrow down your search to the most popular, coolest houses. I've been using Airbnb forever. I like it better than hotels. So I'm excited that they're
Starting point is 00:00:46 a sponsor of the show. And if you haven't used Airbnb yet, I don't know what you're doing, but you should definitely check it out for your next family trip. 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. Thanks for listening, and I hope you enjoy. Each one tells you this. You tear it off and throw it away.
Starting point is 00:01:26 You get to the end and you grab another one. It sneaks up on you. It's almost Martin Luther King Jr. Day. I can't believe it's almost my birthday. December went by so fast. As we said before, the process of running through one of those tear away page a day calendars, we have a daily stoic version, by the way, I have to do today's date. That action, that tearing, it's perfunctory.
Starting point is 00:01:47 You got it as a gift, you picked it up for a regular little dose of inspiration. You read the quote in the morning, you look at the picture, you laugh at the joke, but you're almost certainly missing the deeper message that comes along with the tearing. The first, which we talked about recently, is that another day has passed,
Starting point is 00:02:03 a day you have died, as the Stoic said. But then there is also the message that Philip Larkin notes in his beautiful poem, The Trees, which notes the passing of the seasons and what it means. "'The trees are coming into leaf,' he said, "'like something almost being said. "'The recent buds relax and spread,
Starting point is 00:02:21 "'their greenness is a kind of grief. "'Is it that we are born again and we grow old? No, they die too. Their yearly trick of looking new is written down in rings of grain. Yet still the unresting castles thresh in full-grown thickness every May. Last year is dead, they seem to say.
Starting point is 00:02:40 Begin afresh, afresh, afresh. Each yesterday you tear off is gone and dead. There's something sad about that. While there's a little grief as you look at the next page, it also presents an opportunity, a chance to begin afresh, afresh, afresh, unless you waste it, unless you let it pass by unaware, and then it too dies and the loss is written down
Starting point is 00:03:02 in your rings of grain, never to return." That's something I think about every time I do the Daily Stoic calendar. It's funny, sometimes I'll be gone for a week or I'll forget and then there's just this huge, you're tearing off 10, 15 pages and you go, man, where did that time go? So anyways, the calendar's got a quote every day from the Daily Stoic. It's a nice little reminder and then there is this sort of meta lesson that goes along with it. You can grab that at store.dailystoic.com and I'll link to it in today's episode description. Check it out. You'd think that the more powerful you are, the more money you have, the more freedom
Starting point is 00:03:46 that you would have. And conversely, it seems obvious that if you don't have money, if you don't have power, if you've been disenfranchised by the law or by society or by some terrible set of circumstances, that the converse would be true, that you don't have any freedom. But there is one person who refutes all this. His name is Epictetus. He's a Greek slave in the Roman Empire who knows poverty and torture and exile, a life that is seemingly of darkness, powerlessness, and pain. And yet he becomes in his own lifetime and now through the
Starting point is 00:04:20 centuries through his philosophy, one of the most powerful and one of the freest human beings who ever lived. Epictetus doesn't write anything down. He gives a series of lectures, some of which were actually attended by the emperor of Rome, but those survived to us in the form of the Inchoridion and his discourses. And then there's a more recent collection by Princeton University Press that summarizes some of his best work. And I first discovered Epictetus when I was 19 or 20 years old in the same way that Marcus Aurelius would discover it 2000 years earlier. Someone noticed I was going through something. I was asking for some reading recommendations and they said, you got to check out Epictetus. I think this would be of use to you. Marcus Aurelius was lent a copy of Epictetus by his philosophy teacher, Roustikis,
Starting point is 00:05:06 whom he actually thanks in the opening of Meditations. It's pretty incredible, just the power of a book recommendation, right? He says all the things that he learned from his philosophy teacher, Roustikis, and then he concludes and thanks him for introducing me to Epictetus's lectures and loaning me his own copy. And here are 10 really important ideas that I took from Epictetus about the most important human topic there is, freedom.
Starting point is 00:05:35 Our first task in life, Epictetus says, the chief task of the philosopher is to separate matters into two categories, the stuff that's up to us and the stuff that's not up to us. He puts this in a lovely little Greek phrase, but basically he's saying that there's some things that are up to us and there's some things that are not up to us.
Starting point is 00:05:54 And when we do this honest assessment of what's in our control and what's not in our control, we then have the ability to direct our resources towards what is in our control. Epictetus says this elsewhere. He says basically like a podium and a prison are each a place. He knows prison and then he also knows the podium where he had a lot of power as a teacher
Starting point is 00:06:12 when he became one of Rome's most famous philosophers. But he's basically saying that we all have a certain amount of freedom of choice within our situations. We have to know what this is. When I talk to athletes, I usually try to remind them, look, you don't control what the coach does. You don't control what the media does, you don't control the weather, you don't control who the quarterback throws to, you don't control how your teammates behave, you don't
Starting point is 00:06:34 control who made the rules. All you control is how you play, how you respond to these events. So that's kind of the essence of Epictetus's philosophy. And this seems like a really basic exercise, but we can imagine how essential it would be for someone who spends the first 30 years of their life literally enslaved. He has to figure out, okay, I don't control who my master is. I don't control what my master asks of me. I don't control that I was born this moment in time in this place. I don't control any of this, but I do control who I'm gonna be inside of it. I control whether it makes me bitter and angry in me. He probably realizes, look, I could lay down and die.
Starting point is 00:07:14 I could try to escape. I could choose to be beaten to death. I could steal things. He has a certain amount of choices, and then he has things that he doesn't have choice over. And essentially, Stoicism, Epictetus' philosophy is this focusing, this zeroing in on the parts of the situation that are in our control. He says, look, some things in this world are up to us. And then he lists some of the stuff that is up to us, our judgment, our motivations, our desires, our aversions. He says,
Starting point is 00:07:42 the stuff that's in our own doing. And so this is what we want to focus on because I sometimes tell people like, look, you have a certain amount of energy points, right? Are you going to spend your energy points on things that have already happened, things that may or may not happen? Are you going to focus them on what's in front of you right now?
Starting point is 00:07:58 Are you going to focus them on wishing things were otherwise? Are you going to focus on accepting them and making them work? So basically the first bit of freedom that we have to assert is our freedom to understand what is in our control and what isn't. And as the Serenity Prayer says, first to have the wisdom to know the difference between these two things, and second to have the courage then to seize the power or the control that is ours. If you wanted to inflict a horrendous torture on someone, if you wanted to completely imprison them in circumstances
Starting point is 00:08:41 and in their own misery, here's a spell I would cast on them. I would say, from this moment forward, you have to have incredibly strong opinions about everything you see and hear and read. Because things are constantly happening. So the world is full of events, right? It's full of people doing insane things. And the more opinions we have about this, first off, the more miserable we're going to be. And second, like the less time we're going to have to focus on the things that are actually important to us that we actually have input over.
Starting point is 00:09:12 A lot of us are trapped by our need to have an opinion about everything. One of the things you have to realize when you accept that certain things are outside of your control is that your opinion about them, whether they're good or bad, fair or unfair, it ceases to be relevant because they simply are. Epictetus says that, look, it's not things that upset us, it's our judgment about things. So if we're trying to be free from being upset, from being miserable,
Starting point is 00:09:41 from feeling like we've been mistreated, that this situation sucks, that everything's falling apart. Well, one of the ways we do that is by just deciding not to have that opinion. And look, maybe at some point in Epictetus' life, he got to a point where he just didn't have opinions about stuff, he escaped the opinion trap. I would say probably more realistically,
Starting point is 00:10:04 he understood he was free not to verbalize this opinion. Mark Zyrilius, who was such a big fan of Epictetus, would talk about this. He was like, look, things are not asking to be judged by you. You don't have to have an opinion about this. You don't have to turn this into something. But he also talks about not complaining. He says, never be overheard complaining.
Starting point is 00:10:23 And I think that's partly what Epictetus is saying here. Which is like have the initial opinion that you don't like this, that it sucks, that it should be otherwise, that's so stupid that this or that happened. But then just going yeah I don't I don't need to explore this. I don't need to articulate all the things I don't like about this. I don't need to pick at it. I'm just gonna practice the art of letting this go and not having strong opinions about it because those opinions are really only inflicting upon me the negativity that I feel and it's not changing the situation in any way. And so Epictetus is saying look an critical step on the path to freedom is just to have fewer opinions.
Starting point is 00:11:16 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. Prime members can listen ad free on Amazon Music. And before you go, would you tell us about yourself by filling out a short survey on wondery.com slash survey? Did you know that after World War Two, the US government quietly brought former Nazi scientists to America in a covert operation to advance military technology, or that in the 1950s, the US Army conducted a secret experiment by releasing bacteria over San Francisco to test how a biological attack might spread without alerting the public. These might sound like conspiracy theories,
Starting point is 00:11:53 but they're not. They're well-documented government operations that have been hidden away in classified files for decades. I'm Luke Lamanna, a Marine Corps recon vent, and I've always had a thing for digging into the unknown. It's what led me to start my new podcast, Redacted Declassified Mysteries. In it, I explore hidden truths and reveal some eye-opening events like covert experiments and secret operations that those in power tried to keep buried. Follow Redacted Declassified Mysteries with me, Luke Lamanna, on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts to listen ad free Join Wondery plus in the Wondery app

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.