The Daily Stoic - Embracing Alive Time And Stoic Wisdom with Arnold Schwarzenegger And Robert Greene
Episode Date: October 8, 2023In this Sunday episode of The Daily Stoic, Ryan Holiday takes us on an exhilarating journey through a weekend filled with preparation, family time and embracing what the Stoics call "alive ti...me." After he sits down for a captivating interview with none other than the legendary Arnold Schwarzenegger, he also shares his personal experiences driving along the stunning Pacific Coast Highway, and expresses gratitude for the incredible turnout at his and Robert Greene's sold-out show in Los Angeles. ✉️ 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 weekend edition of the Daily Stoic Podcast. On Sundays, we take a deeper dive into these ancient topics
with excerpts from the Stoic texts, audio books that we like here,
recommend here at Daily Sto Stoke and other long form wisdom that you can
chew on on this relaxing weekend.
We hope this helps shape your understanding of this philosophy and most importantly that
you're able to apply it to your actual life.
Thank you for listening. Hey, it's Ryan Holiday. Welcome to another weekend episode of the Daily Stoke Podcast.
I used to do more of these and I sort of stepped just because we've had so much other content
I wanted to share, but it was a particularly crazy week
that I just got back from.
And a couple of times as I was both enjoying myself
or feeling overwhelmed, I thought,
there's some stoic lessons in this.
And maybe I should share.
And so that's what I thought I might do today.
So last week, it began at, I don't know,
five in the morning, four in the morning.
I had to get up and fly to California,
where I was supposed to do a thing in the morning
and then I got moved at the last second to the afternoon.
But anyways, I flew out to LA.
I got to my hotel, sort of my speaking agent was like,
look, we tried to get you in early,
there's no promises, you may have to wait a while.
So I sort of do my little pre-meditash omelette,
I'm going okay, my mentally prepared,
I will be hungry, I will be tired,
am I prepared to simply sit in a hotel lobby
and wait for my room or how am I going to use this time.
Anyways, I got into Santa Monica and I was pleasantly surprised the room was ready even though
it was early.
In fact, I'd had to book two nights in the hotel, even though I was going to spend zero
nights there.
So I could be in the morning and be in the afternoon and be there until the evening or
whatever.
But it was worth it.
So I could get some work done, right?
Try to do the a lifetime stuff,
try to not waste time.
So I got to my room, did a little reading,
did a little writing, got to run in.
And then I went and I shot some video down on the beach
in Santa Monica with Dawson and Rachel,
who both worked for me.
And then it was time to head over,
to interview someone who I have a lot of memories about, growing
up.
Maybe you do too.
I was interviewing Arnold Schwarzenegger about his new book called Be Useful, which is great.
That episode will come out in a little bit, so stay tuned for that.
But like I told him as we got up there, I had this memory.
I remember my parents took me to the rally at the Capitol
where he announced his candidacy back in 2003.
I don't remember much from it.
I just remember that twisted sister was there
and that they were playing.
We're not going to take it at classic 80s
hair metal song and Arnold was later.
There was some delay.
And I remember they just played the song over and over
and over like they just played it on loop until he showed up,
which was many, many renditions.
So I sort of had that memory.
And, you know, he was governor of California
for a good chunk of my teens then,
which was a surreal, sort of strange experience.
He has a credible life story.
And he and I go back, I know his chief of staff
and his speech writer.
I've known him a long time Daniel and
One time I was going to Gratz to give a talk. This is right after the obstacles away come out
And I think Arnold had read obstacle and no Daniel had and I so I said hey, I'm going there
And I said anything I should do and he introduced me to this friend of his and that friend showed my wife and I around
It was quite a quite an evening.
And so anyways, full circle for me
to finally get to meet him in person interview him,
which I did, which is great.
And then I step out of the interview.
And the one and only ritual is in the lobby.
They had booked us back to back,
Arnold did the Daily Stoke podcast
and then he did rituals podcast.
So we got to shoot the shit for a while there
and Arnold's very cool office. Again, sort of a surreal
sort of pinch me experience that I never expected to happen in my life and
rich sent me a text after and just sort of said, is this real life? And I said,
yeah, it's crazy man. So wrapped up the interview and then I had to drive to Ohai after that. And so I'm driving up the PCH2 Ohai as the sun is setting.
It's been a crazy day. I'm exhausted and it just it just hit me how wonderful life is.
How absurdly beautiful life is.
It's probably one of the most beautiful drives in the world.
Up PCH through you know from Santa Monica to Malibu.
And you're just driving along the ocean.
I mean, I was actually struck by two thoughts.
So, one was just how insanely beautiful the sun
setting over the ocean got through traffic.
It clears up, I'm listening to music,
I'm talking to my kids on the phone, you know,
just life on planet Earth is beautiful and amazing.
And then also this other thought hit me,
which is just how awful human beings are in the sense that
somebody saw this coastline and said,
we need to clear a chunk of it for automobile traffic.
And that's what I was experiencing.
So there's kind of a high loneliness of the human species right there.
First, the engineering marvel that is the PCH Highway 1.
And then the sheer entitlement and destructiveness of human beings embodied all there and one.
I get up to Ohai, I have like five minutes to check in my room, and then I'm meeting
a friend for dinner, Pete Holmes, the comedian who's also been on the podcast, who's booked
millions of dollars a year,
Netflix specials all the prizes of the profession in his and the person was sort of unhappy and busy and too busy and said he never gets to see his kids and you know and Pete was just like,
what are you talking about? Like this is all a voluntary thing. You are choosing for it to be this way.
And it was, it was right and and I've thought about that myself,
and I felt good in the sense that,
although I had to do a talk the next day,
actually two talks, three talks the next day,
I was going straight from those talks
that evening to my hotel and flying home
just to see my kids for less than 24 hours.
I could have spent that in a hotel room,
would have been more relaxing.
Maybe I even would have performed better,
but I had prioritized in my schedule how to do that.
So I really liked that.
It's also interesting, Amy Adams was sitting
on a table across from us.
It was a beautiful evening.
And I went home, I went to the hotel, I crashed,
I got up that morning and went for a very nice run in O'Hai.
And then I spoke, this thing called mastermind talks,
which I'll run a clip of that talk at some point in the future.
It's a cool full circle moment for me also.
I first did that talk 10 years ago, right after Trust Me Online came out and did it again
right when the obstacles away.
It was coming out.
The talk I gave was all about how when the obstacles away came out, you know, my publisher
didn't think it was going to work.
One of my friends thought it sell like 5,000 copies.
And so for now approaching the 10 year anniversary of the obstacles away, just to see the experience
the trajectory, the insane luck that I've had,
it just really made me feel really grateful. But as before I went on, Jason, who's the founder
of Mastermind Talks and his wife, who's the co-founder with him, Candace, she was like, I have a
present for you. She was like, I was in this rare bookstore in Hoai and I was just looking at the
the first editions they had and I think you might like this book.
And you know what she handed me?
She handed me a first edition of The Harder They Fall by Bud Schuylberg, which is a book.
I've talked about this before.
It's a book that changed my life.
I read it when I was at American Apparel.
It's about a publicist who shouldn't be a publicist, who dreams of being a writer.
And I have this memory of that book changing my life.
Like I shortly thereafter quit and became a writer. And retrospect these things are always
more complicated than that. I found out it took four or five years before I made
that leap. But to now have this, I mean, it was just it was just absolutely
perfect. So I will treasure that forever. So thanks to Jason and Candace for having
me. So I gave my talk there in the morning. I got to go back to my hotel,
having me. So I gave my talk there in the morning. I got to go back to my hotel, swim, some laps in the pool, went back down, and then did a 75 minute Q&A there at Mastermind Talks
with some old friends and folks. I'll probably bring you that as an episode someday. And then
I had to get in the car and race down without being frantic or stressed because that's not
a good headspace. I had to race down back to Los Angeles.
Unfortunately, George Ravling was coming
to match my mind talks the next day, so I missed him.
But I had to go, because I was doing my live talk
in LA with the one and only Robert Green at the Eable Theatre.
Credible experience, thank you all who came out.
I think it went really good.
I'll be able to bring you that.
It's just, again, a full circle crazy moment,
15 plus years ago I met Robert when I was 19 years old.
The idea that we would be selling out a theater
in Los Angeles doing a talk together,
just absolutely unreal.
It was great to meet all of you in person
to be able to talk about these ideas.
That was just super cool.
And then, it's to the hotel, crash, drive home,
drive to the crash, get on the shuttle, the airport, fly home.
And I drove straight to the bookstore.
I picked up my son, Jones, and my wife could work.
And then he and I hung out at the house.
But one of the things that she and I had talked about,
that I am working on, I talked about reentry, right?
When I was talking, I was like, hey,
if I don't come home in the middle of the strip,
I'm gonna be gone for six days.
And that's too much.
I don't wanna miss my kids that much.
And I don't wanna be at a pocket that much.
And so I wanna come home in the middle
and we sort of talked about,
is the stress work worth it, is the fatigue worth it.
And she said, it's of course worth it,
but only if you are additive when you come home.
And what she meant was, like,
am I going to come home and have a bunch of needs and be out of it and need to adjust?
Or am I going to connect right back into life? That's one of the things I think you learn
that you travel a lot for work. And you have kids is like, life goes on when you're not
there. So I think there's a stoke humility message. Like, the world is a revolver on you. The world revolves around the things that need to happen. And when you're not there. So I think there's a still humility message. Like the world is a revolver on you,
the world revolves around the things that need to happen.
And when you're out, other people do extra
to compensate for that.
Emily, do you remember when one direction called it a day?
I think you'll find there are still many people
who can't talk about it.
Well, luckily, we can.
A lot, because our new season of terribly famous is all about the first one
directioner to go it alone.
Zayn Malik.
We'll take you on Zayn's journey from Shilad from Bradford to being in the world's
biggest boy band and explore why, when he reached the top, he decided to walk away.
Follow terribly famous wherever you get your podcasts.
So, terribly famous.
So, when you come home, you have to plug back in.
You have to, you know, it's like, I have to go straight in, start doing the dishes.
I have to go in and cook dinner.
I have to go in and, you know, I have to do family stuff,
selfless stuff, not what I need to adjust, right?
So I did that, was home not too long,
I had to head to the airport the next day
and I flew to Seattle for the next gig,
which was a cool experience.
I was excited about.
That gig got canceled last time
because Robert got really sick.
So I appreciate everyone who stuck with us,
who moved things around on their calendar to have us again.
And I got in, I signed all the books for the merch
and then prepped the venue,
he's already, and then we're doing the talks, all's going well.
And right as we're transitioning to the Q&A, we're in the like the early stages of the Q&A,
a woman fell. And she hit her head so loudly, like the camera picked like we don't have a footage
of it, but like you can hear it happening on the footage of the event. I just noticed sort
of a commotion, we sort of rushed down, and this woman had slipped or fallen or passed out.
I don't know exactly, but she fell and she hit her head really hard. And there was blood and
the paramedics had to be called and the police came
and it was quite an experience.
I feel so badly for her from what I understand
she's doing better now.
And I got a text from her daughter that said,
she's finally been discharged from the hospital,
she's in good spirits, she's ready to be home
and we're all happy that she's okay.
And she really appreciates everyone pulling for her.
Everyone in the audience was absolutely incredible.
So patient, nobody I felt like was inconvenienced or frustrated by it,
even though, you know, it's obviously not what anyone expected.
It's not what they paid for.
People have babysitters and places they need to go and flights to catch or whatever.
But everyone was amazing.
It was so much more inspiring to see all the sort of civilians
who rushed to help.
There's a doctor in the audience and she helped.
And everyone was calm.
And the first time I was just a reminder
that you never know what's gonna happen.
You never know what's gonna happen to you.
And you just gotta deal with it calmly.
You gotta remember that this inconvenience for you
can be the worst moment in someone's life
That you know there, but for the grace of God go, I tried to tell myself and then of course in the big scheme of things
None of these things are that important and we just have to be patient and try to be good to each other
So thank you to everyone who stuck around that event went great so cool to me all everyone was telling me backstage
It's just like how historic that venue was.
I guess who Dini had performed there at the Mortheater.
All my favorite crunch bands had performed there.
You know, just a surreal, very cool experience.
Back to the hotel and crashed.
Woke up early, took the flight home.
And then by Friday, I was back in the swing of things.
They're really cool podcasts.
They're on Saturday, which I'll bring you soon.
And now I'm back in the rhythm of things.
I, while I was in Seattle, I went to Elliot Bay Books,
which is one of my favorite indie bookstores in the United States.
I got the new Walter Isaacson Elon Musk book, which I burned through.
So lots of reading, lots of memories, lots of things that got accomplished this last
week.
One of those still lessons I was mentioning.
Remember, pre-meditarns from Lauren, plan for things to go sideways, always have a backup
plan.
When I book travel through the speaking agency, they always book me on a flight and a backup
flight.
And I try to never accept flights or I never try to take a for my first flight. Sorry, my flights to events, I always
do only if there is a backup flight. So things can't go sideways. You know, for instance,
driving down from Ohai to LA for the gig, you know, lots of traffic. So you'll leave early
in advance. I always try to have the backups, the backups, you know, lots of traffic. So you'll leave early in advance. I always try to have
the backups, the backups, the backups, because people are depending on you, right? And if it's more
convenient for me, but there's less of a margin for error, really what I'm just doing is externalizing
those consequences and other people. Number two, the idea of reentry, right? It's not all about you, how quickly can you make fast transitions? We had
Randall Stuttman on the Daily Stoic Leadership Challenge a while back and he said,
you know, a job of leaders to make fast transitions. Transitioning from one talk to the next talk,
to the drive, to the third talk, right? From the talk to dinner afterwards, from the dinner afterwards to sleep,
sleep to the airplane, airplane to home, home to being a dad. How fast can you transition
between the different roles? This requires discipline, it requires focus, requires, I think,
you know, reducing ego a bit, and it requires presence. This is a very important idea.
And then the third idea, what I took from this, is just a memento-mory.
You never know what's going to happen.
A little accident can dramatically change the course of someone's life, and should be
patient with people, should be kind to people, and we should not put stuff off, not delay,
because you never know.
And then on the memento-mory, it wasn't't just that like she fell, but when I went to see Arnold,
he and I were reminiscing about that friend
that had shown us around Gratz.
And I remember a couple years ago,
I went to Google the guy,
I was gonna send him an email or something,
I just say I was thinking about him
and it turned out he had sort of tragically died,
died quite young.
And so I can't think of that evening,
that great time we had together,
without also thinking of, hey, you never know.
And so I can't take people for granted.
And then I guess the final lesson,
the thing that stuck with me most is sort of a gratitude, right?
A gratitude as I drove up PCH and all that beauty,
gratitude as I got to do what I love to hang out with Robert on stage with
people and people bought tickets. I gratitude to get to meet the people that
have read my books. Gratitude to be alive, right? All of this is wonderful and
put your problems in perspective. It's just a lesson I'm trying to meditate on
always. I will stop yammering. I know you don't sign up for this podcast to just listen to uninterrupted
blocks of me talking more than a couple minutes at a time. That's why I keep those emo short.
Anyways, that's what I wanted to talk about on this Sunday episode of the Daily Stoke Podcast.
Thanks to everyone who came out. Thanks to everyone who read the books. Thanks to everyone for
everything. It's a joy of my life to get to do all this and I appreciate you all so much.
Thanks to my family also for putting up with a crazy week like this.
Thanks to Arnold for coming on the podcast and many many other things.
Thanks for listening to the Daily Stoke podcast. Just a reminder we've got signed copies of all
my books in the Daily Stoke store. You can get them personalized, you can get them sent to a friend.
The app goes the way. You go as the enemy, still in this is the key, the leather bound edition
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