The Daily Stoic - History Repeats And It Doesn’t | Focus On The Present Moment
Episode Date: January 30, 2023History is the same thing happening over and over again, Marcus Aurelius said. There’s nothing new under the sun.And yet, like all things in philosophy, the opposite idea must also be held ...true at the same time. The Stoics would also agree with what Stanford professor Scott Sagan once said, “Things that have never happened before happen all the time.”---In today's Daily Stoic reading, Ryan discusses the power of Marcus's assertion that "concentrating on the task before you like a Roman" is the best way to get through the day. ✉️ 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, including the Premium Leather Edition of the Daily Stoic.📱 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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Hi, I'm David Brown, the host of Wondery's podcast business wars. And in our new season, Walmart must fight off target.
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on music or wherever you get your podcasts. Welcome to the Daily Stoic Podcast.
Each day we bring you a meditation inspired by the ancient Stoics, illustrated with stories
from history, current events, and literature to help you be better at what you do.
And at the beginning of the week, we try to do a deeper dive, setting a kind of Stoic
intention for the week, something to meditate on, something to think on, something to leave you with, to journal
about whatever it is you're happened to be doing.
So let's get into it.
History repeats and it doesn't.
History is the same thing happening over and over again, Marks really said there's
nothing new under the sun.
And yet like all things in philosophy, the opposite idea must be held true at the same
time.
The Stoics would agree with Stanford professor Scott Sagan, who once said, things that have
never happened before happen all the time.
Is this a contradiction?
No, it's a tension, it's a balance,
like yin and yang, these two opposing ideas,
actually perfectly complement each other.
The Stoics studied both the patterns of human existence
and practice pre-meditatio melorum,
meditating on all the possible and improbable
outcomes. Marcus really said that there was a rhythm to history and that a healthy mind should
be prepared for anything. Senika said that the job of a leader is to study the past and that
the only inexcusable thing for a leader to say is, I didn't think that could happen.
People who didn't think it could happen were shocked when Caesar overthrew the Republic,
just as they were shocked by the Antonine plague, just as they were shocked that Marcus
Ruelius would turn out to be a good king, despite all the unwritten rules saying that absolute
power corrupts absolutely, just as they are shocked by all the unprecedented breakthroughs
and disruptions and changes of today's world,
and sometimes the shocking goodness and decency of people.
Which is why we must keep these two opposing polls in tension.
We must study the past yet, not take it as a perfect map of the terrain ahead.
We must hang both reminders on our wall that history is the same thing happening again
and again, and that things that have never happened before happen all the time.
And then once they happen, they can happen again and again.
Focus on the present moment.
Marcus Aurelius ruled at a particularly turbulent time.
Wars erupted on multiple fronts, terrible plagues ravaged Rome.
His rule was certainly one of constant, unrelenting pressure.
But he never let it overwhelm him.
From the Stoics and from the example of his adopted father, the Emperor Antoninus Pius,
Marcus found a coping strategy in always sticking close to the present moment
in the duties at hand. When our own stress boils over, we can remember his practices and exercises
to stick with what is in front of us. Not everything that it might mean. At every moment,
keep a sturdy mind on the task at hand as a Roman and as a human being. Doing it was strict
and simple dignity, affection, freedom, and justice,
giving yourself a break from all other considerations. You can do this if you approach each task as
if it is your last, giving up every distraction, emotional subversion of reason, and all drama,
vanity, and complaint over your fair share. You can see how a mastery over a few things makes it
possible to live in abundance and devout light. That's Mark's realist and meditation.
We deliver 3000 years or even a countless multiple
of that keep in mind that no one ever loses a life
other than the one they are living
and no one ever lives a life other than the one they are losing.
The longest and the shortest life then amount to the same
for the present moment lasts for all
and is all anyone possesses.
No one can possess either the past or the future
for how can someone be deprived of what is not theirs." And that's Mark's realises
meditations again. And then this is one of my favorite quotes from Mark. He says,
don't let your reflection of the whole sweep of life crush you. Don't fill your mind with all the
bad things that might still happen. Stay focused on the present situation and ask yourself why it is so unbearable and
can't be survived.
You know, that's pretty good advice for 2020.
You know, the people who are, when is this going to be over?
What's going to happen next?
I'm scared.
What's the news?
Those are the people that had trouble making it, right?
But those of us who sort of locked in and just, what do we have to do today? That's where we made progress. That's how we endured and survived. I remember I was sitting on the porch with Richard
Overton who died, you know, almost two years ago now and
He was at that time one of the the oldest men in the world. There's like 112. I remember asking I said Richard
How do you do it? You go day by day?
And he says no man. says, day by night.
You know, for him, if he survived the night,
that was a successful day.
And, you know, it was, it was touch and go.
It's a great poem that says,
I'm forgetting who it's by.
Oh, Dylan Thomas, he says, you know,
every night it's touch and go.
Look, the future is uncertain.
By definition, the future is uncertain. By definition, the future is unknown.
It unfolds before us, and because of all the directions it could go, some of them are inevitably
not what we want.
They're scary and intimidated and worrisome.
And yes, Ennaka talks about pre-meditashio molorum, thinking of the evils in advance.
I think he means that specifically and generally, but that's about being prepared for what might happen.
Once you've done that, saying you got to zoom in and focus on what's in front of you, that's today.
You know, 2020, as far as what happened, it's what it's what I mean, there have been decades where fewer things happened, right? Or centuries, in some cases, it feels like. But the way you get through that is you wake up and you do what you got to do.
I mean, I think kids have helped me with this where it's like, look, all right, got them
up, got to do the morning routine.
And I'm going to go to work.
I'm going to do what I have to do.
Then I come home.
Then we're going to play.
Then it's dinner.
Then it's the after dinner chores.
And then it's starting the bedtime routine.
And then you get them to bed and then
you know everything that happens from there if you survived is a bonus. And so I think just
routine is helpful for focusing on the present moment but I think Marcus's point of concentrating
on the task before you like a Roman. It's just you know it's beautifully said. And if we could do
that today, who knows what's what was in the news yesterday, you know,
what the speculation about what's going to happen next is nobody knows. Nobody knows, not even me.
And, you know, as I'm recording this, if you, you know, weeks in advance, I know even less.
But I'm not worried about it. Marcus Reyes has another great quote. He goes, yeah, you're worried
about the future. He says, but you'll meet the future with the same weapons that you have now.
So let's focus on what's in front of you right now.
Let's use those weapons where they're most effective.
Let's have the most impact where we can right now.
Let's tackle this problem.
Let's not work on this problem with our eye towards the next problem
and the next problem and the next problem
and then what's going to happen when that next one doesn't work
and blah, blah, blah, blah.
It's so easy to start spiraling and it doesn't help. It doesn't make you
happier. It doesn't make things better. So let's zoom in and look through the stoics. Sometimes
talk about zooming way out and seeing the big picture. Yes. But right now we're talking about zooming
in because zooming in is an effective tool. That's what I want you to be thinking about today.
And that's all I'm going to say. So get out there, get after it.
But stay focused, concentrate like a Roman.
Keep your mind at the task at hand.
Do it with strict and simple dignity, affection, freedom, justice.
Give yourself a break from all other considerations.
As Marcus says, approach this task as if it is your last.
Giving up every distraction, emotional subversion of reason,
give up the drama and the vanity, all the complaints, master these few things, and that will give you a good
life. Talk soon. Hey, Prime Members, you can listen to the Daily Stoic early and ad-free on Amazon Music,
download the Amazon Music app today, or you can listen early and ad-free with Wondery
Plus in Apple podcasts.
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