The Daily Stoic - If It’s Right, It’s Right For You
Episode Date: May 10, 2019Sometimes we get asked or tasked with doing stuff in life we’d rather not have to do. Maybe that’s working a less than glamorous job when we’re young. Maybe that’s filling a role in y...our family that diverges from traditional gender roles. Maybe that’s taking heat for something that wasn’t our fault, or being seen as the bad guy, even though the facts are on our side. There is a tendency to be ashamed of these things, and then to hide them. We’re afraid of people judging us, so we hedge or cover or try to do them at night, when no one can see us. Nonsense. If it’s the right thing to do, then it’s right to do it. Don’t hide it. Embrace it. Own it. Epictetus’s rule for his students was: “Whenever you do something you have decided ought be done, never try to avoid being seen doing it, even if people in general may disapprove of it. If, of course, your action is wrong, just don’t do it at all, but if it’s right, why be afraid of people whose criticism is off the mark?” If being a stay-at-home dad is the right thing for your family, then do it—and anyone who thinks overwise can go to hell. If wearing a silly hat, or “pieces of flair,” while you wait tables is what you’ve got to do to pay for college, then wear it proudly. The hat doesn’t say anything bad about you as a person. It’s a badge of honor not for the job, but for you and your commitment to your family, your goals, your future. If a leader makes a call they know is right, that has to be enough. Who cares if people criticize it afterwards? The fact that other people are mad about it is irrelevant to whether it was what you knew to be the correct choice. “Just that you do the right thing,” Marcus Aurelius said. “The rest doesn’t matter.”Ignore the criticism. Ignoring the judging. Don’t give a second thought to how it looks. If it’s right, it’s right for you. See 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 Stoke. For each day, we read a short passage designed to help you cultivate
the strength, insight, wisdom necessary for living the good life. Each one of these passages is based on the 2000 year old philosophy that has guided some
of history's greatest men and women.
For more, you can visit us at dailystowic.com.
If it's right, it's right for you.
Sometimes we get asked or tasked with doing stuff in life we'd rather not have to do.
Maybe that's working a less than glamorous job when we're young.
Maybe that's filling a role in your family that diverges from traditional gender roles.
Maybe that's taking heat for something that wasn't our fault.
Or being seen as the bad guy, even though the facts are on our side.
There is a tendency to be ashamed of these things, and then to hide them.
We're afraid of people judging us.
So we hedge or cover or try to do them at night when and then to hide them. We're afraid of people judging us,
so we hedge or cover or try to do them at night
when no one can see us.
Nonsense.
If it's the right thing to do, then it's right to do it.
Don't hide it, embrace it, own it.
Epic Titus' rule for his students was,
whenever you're doing something that you have decided
ought to be done, never try to avoid being
seen doing it, even if people in general may disapprove of it. If, of course, your action is wrong,
just don't do it at all, but if it's right, why be afraid of people whose criticism is off the
mark? If being a stay-at-home dad is the right thing for your family, then do it, and anyone who
thinks otherwise can go to hell. If wearing a silly hat or pieces of flair,
while you wait tables, it's what you've got to do
to pay for college, then wear it proudly.
The hat doesn't say anything bad about you as a person.
It's a badge of honor not for the job,
but for you and your commitment to your family,
your goals, your future.
If a leader makes a call they know was right,
that's enough.
Who cares if people criticize you?
Who cares if you take heat for it?
The fact that other people are mad
is irrelevant to whether it was the right thing to do or not.
As Marcus Aurelia said, just that you do the right thing,
the rest doesn't matter.
Ignore the criticism, ignore the judging,
don't give two second thoughts to how it looks. It's right. It's right for you.
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podcast that we do here and you want to get it via email every morning, you can sign up at dailystoic.com
slash email.
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