The Daily Stoic - If You Want to Make the World Better, Do This | Give Thanks
Episode Date: December 29, 2025Let’s focus on getting better. Let’s get serious about stuff we’ve put off. Let’s lend a helping hand. Let’s “fight to be the person philosophy tried to make us,” as Marcus Aure...lius said.Make 2026 the year where you finally bring yourself closer to living your best life. No more waiting. Demand the best for yourself. The Daily Stoic New Year New You challenge begins January 1, 2026. Learn more and sign up today at dailystoic.com/challenge.📕 The Daily Stoic eBook is on sale for $2.99! Grab yours now at dailystoic.com/discount🎁 This holiday season, give the gift of Daily Stoic Premium | https://dailystoic.supercast.com/gifts/new 👉 Support the podcast and go deeper into Stoicism by subscribing to The Daily Stoic Premium - unlock ad-free listening, early access, and bonus content: https://dailystoic.supercast.com/🎥 Watch the video episodes on The Daily Stoic YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/@DailyStoic/videos🎙️ Follow The Daily Stoic Podcast on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/dailystoicpodcast✉️ 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.
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Welcome to the Daily Stoic Podcast, where each day we bring you a stoic-inspired meditation
designed to help you find strength and insight and wisdom into everyday life.
Each one of these episodes is based on the 2,000-year-old philosophy that has guided some of
history's greatest men and women help you learn from them.
to follow in their example, and to start your day off with a little dose of courage and discipline
and justice and wisdom. For more, visitdailystoic.com.
It's discouraging out there. It's a sad state of affairs. No one thinks this is how things should be. No one thinks this is how society should work. There's cruelty, there's stupidity, people being left behind. We're failing to address basic problems. We're failing at basic functions. Okay. So what do we do? After all, each of us is only an individual. Well, the Stoics tell us that this is precisely the place to start. While others were obsessed with working,
their land or breeding their horses, Epictetus said that he preferred to cultivate his own
improvement day to day. Rome was a dark and screwed up place then, especially in Nero's
court where he lived, but Epictetus turned himself into a bright light. He was a beacon that
shined then and continues to shine today. Stoicism is the art of getting active in your own
rescue, and in so doing, you end up rescuing others. By a reformer.
and improving ourselves, we are reforming and improving the world because we are a part of the world.
To put a spin on one of Marcus Aurelius' great lines, what improves the B improves the hive.
Look, we don't control what anyone else is going to do in 2026, but we can guarantee right here, right now, that it won't be all bad.
We can make sure right here, right now, that things do move forward.
How? By making sure that we are good in 2026, by making sure that we take a big step forward
in the year ahead, we can be of service to the hive, to society, by getting serious about taking
care of ourselves. Let's quit those bad habits. Let's opt out of the nastiness and the divisiveness.
Let's focus on getting better. Let's get serious about stuff we've put off. Let's lend a helping hand.
Let's fight to be the person that philosophy tried to make us, as Marcus Reelius said.
Not later, not only if everyone else does too, but right now, on our own, because we know we need to, because we know somebody needs to.
And look, my way of getting serious about this every year, and I do this every year, is through the Daily Stoic New Year, New You challenge.
It's 21 days of stoic-inspired challenges that kickoff on January 1st that are designed to make me cultivate that improvement, that are designed to make me be what I wish more people would be in the year ahead.
I don't control what they do. I don't control what the norm is. I don't control what the trends are, but I control whether I get serious. I control whether I get better, right? I control whether I'm a bright spot or not in the year ahead. And that's what we built the challenge you're out. And by the way, you're not going to be doing it alone.
because it's going to be thousands of Stoics all over the world doing it as well.
We've been doing it for almost 10 years now.
I have habits, practices, things I picked up in the 2019 challenge,
in the 2018 challenge, and the 2022 challenge.
Every year we do a new version of the Daily Stoic, New Year, New Year, New Year,
It gets better every year, and it helps thousands of people all over the world get better, too.
I'd love to see you in there.
You can sign up right now at dailystoic.com slash challenge.
It's going to be awesome.
But it starts here really soon.
It's going to start on January 1st.
So you've got to sign up before it's too late.
DailyStoic.com slash challenge.
I will see you in there.
Give thanks.
In all things we should try to make ourselves as grateful as possible.
Seneca says in moral letters 81, for gratitude is a good thing for ourselves in a manner in which
justice commonly held to belong to others is not. Gratitude pays itself back in large measure.
I guess what you could say is that gratitude is a gift you give yourself, even though you are
expressing your gratefulness to other people. But think of all the things that you could be
grateful for today, that you are alive, that you live primarily in a time of peace, that you have
enough health and leisure to read a book or listen to this podcast. But what of the little things,
the person who smiled at you, the woman who held the door open, the song you liked on the radio,
pleasant weather? Gratitude is infectious, its positivity is radiant. Even if today was your last day
on earth, even if you knew in advance that it was going to end in a few short hours, would there
not still be plenty of things to be grateful for? How much better would your life be if you kicked
off every morning like that if you let it carry through from morning tonight and touch every
single part of your life. I think about gratitude a lot. Obviously, we did our Thanksgiving
message a month ago where we're talking about gratitude. I have a gratitude journal, actually,
Mona Katan, the makeup artist and online influencer sent it to me as a gift a couple years ago.
And I write like one or two things that I'm grateful for a day. You know, my family, my friends,
my success, you know, the obvious things.
But I try on a really consistent basis to take the time to express gratitude for things
that maybe on the surface I'm not grateful for, political polarization, Trump, you know,
critics, pain that I feel, an argument that I just had, that I'm sick.
You know, I try to express explicitly there on those pages gratitude for things.
that, again, I'm not feeling grateful for, but in taking a moment to write why I am grateful
for them, I become grateful for them. I force myself to see something good in them. I force
myself to find a positive in it. I force a way to see that actually I'm quite lucky, even if
this thing is itself an unlucky thing, right? In perspective of all the things that I am
lucky for, this little bit of bad luck isn't so bad.
And so forcing myself to write that down to think about is really great.
My friend Pete Holmes, a comedian, talked about how whenever he thinks of his parents, he says to himself, I forgive them, right?
He's actively practicing like what he wants to feel, even though he doesn't actually feel that.
And it becomes true over time.
And I think this is an exercise we can apply to gratitude.
And, you know, Marcus says, convince yourself that everything is a gift from the gods, that it's all a gift, that it's all a gift, that it's great.
even though it doesn't always feel that way. Talk soon.
Hey, it's Ryan. Thank you for listening to the Daily Stoag podcast. I just wanted to say we so appreciate it.
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