The Daily Stoic - Have You Considered This? | What Stoicism Can Teach Us About Mental Health
Episode Date: February 7, 2023Things go wrong. We get screwed over. We make mistakes. It happens. The idea that it shouldn’t affect a Stoic? Preposterous. No amount of training, Seneca writes, takes away natural fe...elings. So it’s OK that you don’t like what happened. What matters is what happens next.---Ryan also talks about how Stoicism has improved his mental health and how it can improve yours too.✉️ 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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Hey, prime members, you can listen to the Daily Stood Podcast early and add free on Amazon Music.
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Hi, I'm David Brown, the host of Wundery's podcast business wars.
And in our new season, Walmart must fight off target, the new discounter that's both savvy and fashion forward.
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on music or wherever you get your podcasts. 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.
You can be this. Just don't be that.
Things go wrong. We get screwed over. We make mistakes. It happens. The idea that it shouldn't affect a stomach. This is preposterous. No amount of training, Sena Karaitz, takes away natural feelings.
So it's okay that you don't like what happened, what matters is what happens next.
Take the NFL coach Steve Wilkes, for instance, who was just passed over for a head coaching job, he more than deserved.
He took over as the interim coach for the Ailing Carolina Panthers when they were one and four, and he led the team to a seven
and ten finish. He won the overwhelming support of the locker room, and he impressed the league.
And yet there he was, passed over for the job for a whitehead coach who had just been fired
months before, after leading the Colts to a three in five and one record. Was there a racial
component to this? Maybe Wilks has certainly experienced
that before, but whether it is or isn't, doesn't change the fact that it's still a thing
that sucks for him. No one wants to lose out on a job. And if it is, in fact, another example
of the race problem in the NFL, it only makes things more frustrating and painful. And this
is why Wilks' comments after he didn't get the job are so perfect.
The sun rose this morning and by the grace of God's so-did eye, he explained, I am disappointed
but not defeated.
Most people aren't built for this, he said, but I know what it means to persevere and see
it through.
Disappointed, not defeated.
The Stoics knew disappointment well, but they rarely despaired.
They would have liked Wilkes' attitude, as well as the distinction that Hemingway made
in the Old Man in the Sea.
Man is not made for defeat.
A man could be destroyed, but not defeated.
You don't control what the fates decide for you.
You don't choose to be passed over for a job.
Nobody wants to come face to face with an error
or an unpleasant reality.
But you do control whether you give up,
whether you let it break your heart,
whether you are defeated.
defeated. You're getting Stoicism totally wrong if you imagine the Stoics as the sort of emotionless,
invulnerable, like superhuman men and women, they weren't.
They were people like you and us, which meant they had problems like the rest of us.
I've also had to use St stoicism in my own life,
going through breakups, going through disappointments.
Stoicism is there to help us with the problems of light.
And so in today's episode,
we're gonna talk about some stoic strategies
for improving your mental health and your mental wealth.
Senek has said that the mind must be taken
on wandering walks. He said, otherwise
you'll break, you'll be too tense. I totally agree, I try to start my day with a
walk and I try to end my day with a walk. I don't even consider it exercise,
although it is that. To me, it's putting the body in motion, it's slowing the
mind down. I'm getting outside, I'm connected with nature, maybe I'm having a
conversation with someone else that I care about. And even though I'm moving, I'm connected with nature. Maybe I'm having a conversation with someone else
that I care about.
And even though I'm moving, I'm getting closer
to a place of stillness.
Walking to me is a magical cure all.
So listen to the stillyx and take a walk.
Instead of talking about happiness,
Aristotle uses this word judymania,
which basically means human flourishing,
which I think is a better way
of thinking about happiness. Happiness isn't exuberance, it's not excitement, it's not getting everything
you want. I think it's a deeper place, it's when you're realizing the potential that you have as a
human being in all your forms. And so if we can think then of happiness is that the byproduct of doing all the things right in your life
wanting the right things, living the right way,
prioritizing the right things, doing the right thing.
Happiness is the byproduct of that. I think it's a better way to think about it.
Dr. Frankl talks about how happiness must ensue, it cannot be pursued.
It's not a thing you get as a reward here.
It's actually the day to dayness of living and acting rightly,
or the still is living and acting with virtue.
I try to remind myself as many times as I can every day and every minute
that this moment is enough. I don't need to be anywhere.
I don't need to do anything.
Nothing is expected of me but presence,
just to be present.
That is like the hardest thing in the world,
but it's also the most wonderful thing in the world.
You look out, you experience where you are,
you're not wishing for things to be otherwise.
That's what stoicism is about to me.
It's about becoming present,
it's about locking in where you are,
not needing or wanting anything else, but what is in front of you right now.
It starts with the little choices, the decision to get up early, the decision to go work
out, the decision to not check your phone first thing in the morning. Epic Titus says,
if you want to be beautiful, make beautiful choices. And I think about that all the time.
Am I making the good choice? Am I making the lazy choice and I'm making the short-term choice or
the long-term choice. Make good choices and it gets you where you want to go.
Zeno says that well-being is realized by small steps but it's no small thing.
Those little choices matter and it starts there and I would say it starts the
second you wake up. In fact it starts with the time that you decide to wake up.
One of my favorite pages is one of my favorite books
that I like to read to my kids is asking for help
isn't giving up.
It's refusing to give up.
I have no shame or compunction about having gone to therapy,
about going to therapy.
In fact, I've gone to almost every kind of therapy
you can imagine, which actually brings us
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stow it, which I'll link in the description below. Betterhelp.com slash daily
stow it. We suffer more in imagination than in reality. What does that mean? I think
what Sena is saying is that most of the things that we're anxious about, that we
torture ourselves about, that we dread, that we catastrophize in our head, they
never actually end up happening.
Sure, bad stuff does happen in life, but our nightmares are usually worse than reality.
Don't suffer unnecessarily.
Don't borrow suffering from the future.
The present should keep you plenty occupied enough, focus on what's in front of you.
Prepare, be adaptable, be ready, but don't suffer more
in imagination than you have to in reality.
What is tranquility?
What is happiness?
Seneca says it's the sense that you're on the right path and the ability not to be distracted
by all the past at crisscross yours.
He said, especially the path of footsteps of the people who are hopelessly lost.
The sense of why you're here, what you're meant to do, what you're working on,
why you're working on it, that's the really clarifying thing that allows you to feel at peace,
to feel good, to feel secure, and you have to cultivate that sense.
It doesn't just happen.
It comes from introspection, it comes from goal setting, it comes from saying no to things,
it comes from really walking into what you are
meant to do while you're doing it, ignoring, shutting out, turning away from everything
else.
Mark is really straight to himself. He says, fight to be the person philosophy wants you
to be. And I just love that so much. It's that stoicism has this ideal for you to be
someone who's resilient, someone who's strong, someone who's virtuous, someone who's kind,
who cares about the common good, someone who isn't easily rattled, someone
who's committed to bettering themselves.
That's what Stoicism wants for you.
That's what the Stoics have been writing about for centuries.
That's what we do in these videos in the Daily Stoke email.
That's the ideal.
But the question is, are you fighting for yourself?
Are you fighting to be that thing?
Are you striving today to get a little bit closer to that perfect ideal? Are you
fighting for yourself? The Stoics can't make you be or do anything. They can just
lay out the formula but it's ultimately on you to follow it to step up and
actually be it. Be it! in Apple Podcasts. Is this thing on? Check one, two, one, two. Hey y'all, I'm Kiki Palmer.
I'm an actress, a singer, an entrepreneur,
and a Virgo, just the name of you.
Now, I've held so many occupations over the years
that my fans lovingly nicknamed me Kiki Kiki
Pabag Palmer.
And trust me, I keep a bad love.
But if you ask me, I'm just getting started.
And there's so much I still want to do.
So I decided I want to be a podcast host.
I'm proud to introduce you to the Baby Mrs. Kiki Palmer podcast.
I'm putting my friends, family, and some of the dopest experts in the hot seat to ask
them the questions that have been burning in my mind.
What will former child stars be if they weren't actors?
What happened to sitcoms?
It's only fans, only bad.
I want to know, so I asked my mom about it.
These are the questions that keep me up at night, but I'm taking these questions out of
my head and I'm bringing them to you.
Because on Baby This Is Kiki Palmer, no topic is off limits.
Follow Baby This Is Kiki Palmer, whatever you get your podcast.
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