The Daily Stoic - It’s Not Supposed To Go Down Easy | This 10 Minute Habit Will Change Your Life
Episode Date: March 24, 2026Amor Fati is a challenge. That’s the whole point.🎥 VIDEO EPISODE | Watch this episode here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9DCub4GIbZw🎙️ AD-FREE | 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/✉️ FREE STOIC WISDOM | Want Stoic wisdom delivered to your inbox daily? Sign up for the FREE Daily Stoic email at https://dailystoic.com/dailyemailSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Daily Stoic Podcast, designed to help bring those four key Stoic virtues, courage, discipline, justice, and wisdom into the real world.
It's not supposed to go down easy. Look, if it was easy, it wouldn't be much in the way of a philosophical insight.
If anyone could do it and do it without much effort, it wouldn't be very impressive.
Nietzsche said that his formula for human greatness was amorphati,
that one wants nothing to be different, he said, as a prescription,
not forward, not backward, not in all eternity,
not merely bear what is necessary, he said, still less conceal it.
Love it.
Greatness is not easily in reach by definition.
So loving what happened, I mean, sure, it's easy to love what's fun and wonderful.
it's hard to accept the inconveniences of life, traffic and jerks and air pod drop down a sewer grate, let alone the tragedies.
How can you love a prolonged illness, an economic crash, a pandemic, a brutal violent act, a public humiliation, the loss of a dear friend or a family member?
The answer is only by difficult work.
It takes practice.
It takes reflection.
It takes perspective.
It takes time.
Amor Fati is a challenge.
That's the whole point.
It's something you're supposed to wrestle with, struggle with,
asking yourself, could that possibly apply here?
It's a formula for greatness because it demands greatness.
It is out of the reach of most of us,
out of easy reach anyway.
We have to grow to grab hold of it.
And in the end, it's that growth that is probably the only redeeming part
the entire experience.
Hey, it's Ryan Holiday. Welcome to another episode of the Daily Stoic podcast. I just had a crazy travel day. I got up at four in the morning. I should have like $3.50.
Drove to the airport in Panama City, Florida. I caught a 7 a.m. flight. Had to get there crazy early because of all this TSA stuff. I didn't know how long the line would be. And I called the airport the day before just to ask, you know, hey, is it crazy at that airport? And they said, all we're allowed to tell you is that you should get here three.
hours before your flight. Of course, there was precisely two minutes of traffic. I got to the airport
at 458, and I was through security at 5 a.m. But anyways, I flew from Panama City, Florida to
Atlanta, Atlanta to San Francisco, did a thing in San Francisco, which I'll bring to you shortly,
and then I got back to SFO and flew home, did the exact same thing in reverse. But at those
three airports, I probably walked five miles. I walked a mile or two of Panama City, walked almost
two miles in Atlanta, walked quite a bit at SFO. It's what I do. Actually, when I had Michael Easter,
who wrote The Comfort Crisis, we talked about exactly this. This is what he said. Did you work out
this morning? Tiny bit in the hotel room. In the hotel room. What do you do in a hotel room?
I did, you know, rear foot elevated split squats.
I just did a lot of those and some planks, just quick.
And then at the airport, I'll just walk around carrying my bags.
I do that too.
I feel like I cover a lot of ground inside airports.
Like I'll walk like a couple miles just wait.
Like I'm like, I can sit here and do nothing.
Yes.
Or I could get a three mile walk in over the next 45 minutes.
Dude, it is one of the greatest travel exercise hacks.
He's just walking around the airport.
In the airport, especially if you have a carry-on or something.
I've gotten like six, seven miles when I've had a long layover.
Like I can sit in this lounge or in this uncomfortable chair and just like BS on the internet.
Right.
Or I can just walk.
And the walking also, I think, gives me ideas, right?
Sure.
And you observe, you see a lot of interesting things.
So, yeah, I'm just 100%.
Like, I'm an airport walker.
Yeah, I think like obviously beautiful walks in nature are great.
And if you can walk around outside somewhere wonderful, you should do it.
Yes.
But I think walks around parking lots, walks in the airport, walks as you're just killing time, are underrated and also really good.
And you're still getting most of the benefits of like it's the body being in motion, not the context of where it's in motion.
Yeah.
It's doing most of the value for you.
Right.
If the context was the most important thing, running on a treadmill would not work.
Right.
So like, it all adds up.
And it's actually funny.
He has a new book out called Walk with Weight, which is about rucking.
I haven't read it yet, but I'm sure it's good.
Certainly, I am ideologically aligned with the idea of walking.
I figure, hey, I'm about to be on an airplane for a couple hours.
I'm going to be sitting there.
I'm not going to be able to move.
I should move now.
Like, it was funny.
I was at SFO, and I was like, oh,
I got lounge access on this flight because of the credit credit I have.
I was like, I could just chill out in the lounge.
I could eat something.
I could work.
I was like, you know what?
No, I'm going to walk the next 25 minutes.
And that's precisely what I did.
Sorry, I just had to pause recording to let my dog in the room.
Oreo, hey, Oreo.
Can you sit on the rug?
Can you sit and be quiet?
I just took Oreo for a walk.
I love walking.
I could have walked a little longer, but we had to put the kids in bed.
Anyways, back to what I was saying.
The only downside about the whole trip,
The only thing I'm struggling with is as I walk through the airport, I get recognized a lot.
And I'm not saying that as a complaint or to brag.
It's just like a reality of my life that wasn't my reality before.
I could use to be able to be sort of anonymous in the airport.
And so I could walk furiously up and down the terminal.
I could cover a great distance and just be an anonymous person in the world.
It's one of the benefits of traveling is the sort of anonymousness of the whole world.
And it was funny, I was on the phone with Samantha, my wife, the whole time.
And she was like, you keep getting stopped.
She was like, we got to not have this conversation.
I can't stand the interruption and the pausing.
And I was like, I get it.
I appreciate all the people that stopped to say hello that are fans.
But I was kind of in the middle of a meditative practice, and I wasn't alone.
I was talking to someone.
But anyways, the point is, I try to walk.
I talk about walking and I walk in some beautiful places.
I love where I live in the country.
but you can walk anywhere.
And I love walking in the airport.
And, you know, I look at my steps on that trip and I go, yeah, I spent a lot of time traveling.
It was a grind.
But I also covered some serious distance.
And that's actually what we're going to talk about in today's episode.
This is something I put together while I was walking actually down here in Florida on an earlier trip, walking down along the beach on the Gulf here.
And there's some stoic lessons in it.
Let me bring that to you now.
We've got an employee here at Daily Stoke.
I won't say who because it's kind of private,
but they've been using Monarch, today's sponsor,
to track their progress as they try to pay off their student loan debts.
I'm a college dropout, so I don't have any debt, thankfully,
but I can only imagine how overwhelming it would be to have this thing hanging over you.
And she's been using the app to budget and save,
and it's bringing her a little bit closer every day to being debt-free,
which I can only imagine would be a huge,
relief. Monarch shows you exactly where your money is going. It helps you redirect it towards what
matters. With automated tracking and clear projections, you can actually see yourself getting closer
to being debt-free or hitting your savings milestone instead of just hoping it happens. Unlike
most other personal finance apps, Monarch is built to help make you proactive and not just reactive,
and Monarch helped users save over $200 per month on average after joining. You can set yourself up for
financial success in 2026 with Monarch.
The all in one tool that makes proactive money management simple all year long, and you can
use code stoic at Monarch.com for half off your first year.
That's 50% off your first year at Monarch.com code stoic.
Who likes bugs?
Not me.
I guess my wife does.
My kids sometimes like bugs, but I don't like bugs in my house, right?
I don't like them around my food.
I don't like them crawling on me.
I don't like bugs.
And the problem is you see one bug and then you ignore it,
and all of a sudden you got hundreds of bugs and you got an infestation.
If you are looking for DIY pest control, check out today's sponsor.
That's Pesty.
They're making protecting your home from unwanted pests super simple.
With Pesty, you can get started at 35 bucks of treatment and get a customized plan based
on your location, bugs, and climate.
They send you everything you need.
Prograde pesticide.
That's the same stuff the pros use.
They give you a sprayer.
They give you a mixing bag gloves.
instructions and you can complete the whole thing in less than 10 minutes. My wife loves bugs, which
she also loves our animals, and so she's always worried that killing the bugs will kill the animals.
Well, Pesty Pestic are fully registered and have been used in hospitals and schools all over the country,
and you can try Pestey totally risk-free with their 100% bug-free guarantee or your money back.
If the bugs don't go away, you get a free refund. Bugs hate to see you coming with Pestey.
Just go to Pestee.com slash Doe for an extra 10% off your order. That's P-E-S-T-I-E-com slash Doe
for an extra 10% off.
There are a lot of good habits.
There's a lot of good practices.
There's a lot of things you should be doing.
But the single most important and beneficial thing
you can do for your physical, emotional,
and spiritual health is to take a walk.
And not just sometimes, but you should do it daily.
You should do it multiple times a day.
I'm Ryan Holiday.
I'm the creator of the Daily Stoak.
And my daily walking practice, which I do sometimes here at the beach,
or I do every day with my dog,
I do it when I'm on the phone.
I'm walking as much as I can every day.
because it is a philosophical practice.
It's one the ancient Stoics practice.
It's one that parents have practiced
for thousands of years.
It's one that's helpful to physicists and artists
and creators, entrepreneurs,
and priests and poets alike.
And that's what we're gonna talk about
in today's video,
why you need to get outside and take a walk.
I'm not saying it'll solve all your problems,
just most of them.
I'm not saying it's the most philosophical thing
you can do today.
I'm just saying it's something
that all the philosophy
try to do every day. Look, what I am saying is that you should go for a walk. It'll make
everything better. It always does. It relaxes you. It calms you down. It gets you outside.
It gets you moving. It gets the mind moving. It both slows the mind down and gets it
moving. Seneca, the Stoic philosopher, said that we should take wandering walks.
He said so the mind might be nourished and refreshed by the open air and deep.
breathe it. So why aren't you doing it? Why are you sitting there? Why are you watching this on the
couch or at your desk? You need to get moving. You need to get outside. There's a famous
exchange with the philosopher Kierkegaard. He's writing a letter to his sister-in-law who's depressed.
He's having a hard time. He says, above all else, you must not lose the desire to walk.
Now you could set your watch in 19th century Copenhagen to Kierkegaard's walking habit. He would write in the
mornings and in the afternoon he would walk. He would walk on the sidewalks, which had just been
recently invented. He would walk out past town. He'd walk out to the cemetery where he's now buried.
He says, every day I walk myself into a state of well-being. He says, I walk away from every
illness. He says, I know no thought so burdensome that you cannot walk away from it. Basically,
he believed that movement was sacred. It was cleansing. It was clarifying. He understood that to
someone who was struggling, there was something extra important about getting outside, getting moving,
getting out of your own head. There's another famous Kirkagard story where he's driven out of his
house one morning. He's frustrated. He's high, strong, he's upset. The writing isn't going well. And he walks
for hours, hours and hours. And he's finally at peace. He's turning around. He gets back home and right in front
of his house. He bumps into some person he knows in town and they unload all his problems on him.
He was a little frustrated, but he says, actually, it wasn't a big deal.
He says, there was only one thing left for me to do.
He said, instead of going home, I had to go walking again.
And that's an essential idea.
If you want to be healthy, if you want to be happy, you should always be walking.
The single best thing you can do for your mental health is the thing that I'm doing right now.
You should take a walk.
There's actually an old Latin expression.
It is solved by walking.
Nietzsche actually said that it was only ideas had by walking that have any worth.
And then the Zen Buddhists have an idea of walking meditation.
I've never gone for a walk and then gotten back to my house and not felt better about myself, about the world,
about whatever I was so upset and stressed about.
But the idea is you get moving, you get the repetitive motion going, you get outside, and it calms you down.
The best thing you can do in crazy times like this is to go for a walk.
The poet William Wordsworth walks something like 180,000 miles in his lifetime.
That's like six and a half miles a day from.
age five when he picked up the habit. He would walk every day near a pond near his house,
and it was part of his poetry practice, as it is for countless artists and physicists and philosophers.
It was on these walks that the lines from his poems would come to him. And he'd often be hours and
hours from home, so he'd have to repeat them over and over again in his head. And in doing that,
that's where he would refine and hone the language until it was perfect. And actually, it's something
that his biographers have wondered about ever since.
Was it the scenery that was spurring the ideas?
Or was it the movement that was jogging the thoughts?
I think any ordinary person who has a walking process
knows that the answer is both.
It's obviously both.
This is why the Buddhists spoke of walking meditation.
It both clears and empties the mind
and allows things to pop into it.
And in our own search for beauty and wonder and life,
I think we would be well served by developing this walking practice.
If we want to access those deeper parts of our consciousness,
we need to get outside and get moving.
Like on a good walk, your mind isn't blank.
It can't be. Otherwise, you'll trip over something,
but you're also being forced to observe and consider
and evaluate the things around you.
And in fact, that studies confirm this,
that walkers tend to perform better
in what's called creative divergent thinking.
Some studies have even found that it's a treatment for major
depression, right? That's the key to a good walk. It's awareness to be present and open to the experience.
You put your phone away. You put pressing business on pause. You let your stress melt away.
You look down at your feet. You wonder what they're doing. You notice how effortlessly you're moving.
You know, is it you that's doing that or is it happening on its own? You breathe in, you breathe out.
You consider who paved this trail. You consider who walked this trail before you. You consider where
where those people are now, what happened to them?
And when you start to feel those tugs of responsibility or those interruptions, you push them
away like you do the thoughts during a meditation.
You get lost, you are unreachable, you go slowly.
And the wonderful thing about walking is that it's available to all of us all the time.
How did he stay sane?
I mean, there must have been so much pressure, so much work.
There was so much bad news, so much stress, so much death.
so much struggle, so much responsibility.
Marcus Aurelius didn't have an easy go of it.
Being the emperor would have been extraordinarily difficult.
There was floods and famines and wars and betrayals,
plagues and difficult people.
He had children.
He had health issues.
So where does he find relief?
Where does he find goodness and beauty?
How does he replenish himself?
In himself, to be sure, in philosophy,
Yes, but where else?
It's clear from meditations that Marcus Aurelius, in addition to his interior explorations, was a walker.
He walked around Rome.
He walked around Greece.
He walked around the countryside.
We see his poetic observations about wheat bending low under its own weight.
We see that he watched animals as they moved through the hills.
He was fascinated by the olive groves on his estate if the multiple metaphors that he uses are any indication.
He loved hot springs and rivers and waves and rocky shores.
Nature nurtured him as it nurtures us.
It provided him perspective and peace.
It humbled him. It inspired him.
It calmed him down.
It replenished him.
You know, the world is crazy, but it's also always been crazy.
And there has always also been calm and beauty and comfort in nature.
That's what the outside world provides.
us. If you're feeling anxious or stressed or overworked, go for a walk, as we said. Get outside.
Get into nature. Go for a height. Lose yourself in a forest. Look out over a hill and see how small
things are down below. Get lost. It's the best way for you to get out of your head to get away
from it all. By getting outside, you get outside yourself. You get outside your head. Literally,
go touch grass. Let nature do its work on you.
a reason that poets and priests and philosophers and artists and entrepreneurs, ordinary people
alike, take walks. There's something magical about getting outside and getting moving. Go slowly,
go fast. It doesn't matter. It doesn't matter that it burns calories, although that's great, too.
What matters is that it gets you outside, gets you moving. It gets you in a meditative state
of mind. It both clears the mind and opens it up for things to pop into your head. Some of my
best ideas as a writer have popped into my head, things that I've needed to figure out in my
marriage, things I've been struggling with as a parent, as a human being. I always feel better
after I take a walk, which is why it's what you should be doing, not just occasionally, but every
day, sometimes multiple times a day. It is the single best foundational habit you can practice
in your life. Darwin's daily writing routine involves several walks. Daniel Canaman, the
groundbreaking behavioral psychologist. He said that he did some of his best thinking on leisure
walked with his friend and collaborator Amos Turski.
When Martin Luther King was a seminary student,
he would walk multiple times a day,
that just means walkers, right?
They were on the move, as we should all be as well.
And look, finally, I would just say this.
It doesn't matter where you do it.
It certainly doesn't hurt to go for a walk,
catch a beautiful sunset on a beach
or walk through an old growth forest,
but some of the best walks of my life
have been in airport terminals and around parking lots.
The important thing was that I got outside
and I got moving.
It was what I brought to it, not where it brought me.
It was about the state of mind it brought me to,
not what state I was in.
So sure, location helps and prettier is always better than ugly.
Quiet is always better than loud.
But the walking is what's magic, not where you're walking.
So just get out there and get after it
and let this thing change your life this year.
