The Daily Stoic - Leaders Are Made Not Born | Keeping “The News” In Check
Episode Date: July 26, 2021“Marcus Aurelius did not come out of the womb a leader. Nor was he an emperor ‘by blood.’ In fact, when first told he was to be king, he wept--thinking of all the bad and failed kings o...f history.”Ryan explains how becoming a great leader is a process, and reads this week’s meditation from The Daily Stoic Journal, on today’s Daily Stoic Podcast.If you want to become a better leader, sign up for our new 9-week live course The Daily Stoic Leadership Challenge today! This is a masterclass in leadership with the cadence and rigor of a boot camp. It is also a live course, which means all participants will join the course together and move through together at the same pace to their own version of the same goal—to be a great leader. Registration will close on Saturday, July 31st at midnight CST and the course will begin on Sunday, August 1st. We hope to have you join us at dailystoic.com/leadershipchallengeSign up for the Daily Stoic email: http://DailyStoic.com/signupFollow 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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Hey, prime members, you can listen to the Daily Stoke podcast early and add free on Amazon music. Download the app today.
Welcome to the Daily Stoke podcast. Each day we bring you a meditation inspired by the ancient Stokes 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 happy to be doing.
So let's get into it.
Leaders are made not born.
Marcus Aurelius does not come out of the womb, a leader, nor was he emperor by blood.
In fact, when first told he was to be king, he wept, thinking of all the bad and failed
kings of history.
So how does he get there to philosopher King?
Book one of meditations shows us, in the first 10% of the book,
Dez and Lessons, as it's called. He thanks people who groomed him into becoming
one of history's greatest leaders. He knew that without his philosophy teachers
and rhetoric teachers, and most importantly his mentor Antoninus Pius, he
wouldn't have become who he became.
These first pages of the book are deceptive too because they compress a process which
took 23 years.
It was nearly two and a half decades between the time Hadrian first set in motion his plan
for Marcus and the day he would become the emperor of Rome.
That's what it takes because leaders aren't born.
They're made.
And yet some of us recoil at this idea.
Of course we understand that athletes and doctors and dentists and lawyers and engineers
and accountants and contractors and cooks even go through a process to master their profession. The leadership, leaders don't do that.
We think you either have it or you don't.
But a look at some of history's greatest leaders
tell you that leadership is a process, not a position.
As the Pulitzer Prize historian Thomas Ricks writes
about George Washington,
the process of becoming a valiant leader
was Washington's work of a lifetime.
While a few of us will be plucked
by someone who has charted a course for us
or be thrust into a position of leadership
the way Marcus was,
we all need to think of leadership
as the work of our lifetime,
because we're all leaders in one way or another
of families, of companies, of a team, of an audience,
of a group of friends, of ourselves.
So we could all benefit from a carefully thought out
and tested process from which we come out
of the other side, a better leader.
And that's why I've been hard at work
at the Daily Stic leadership challenge ancient wisdom for modern leaders. We've designed a
nine-week course to mirror the kind of education that produced historically
great leaders like Marcus Aurelison, in fact all the stoics. We built it around
the key lessons from Marcus's own development. The idea that leadership is less a position and more process.
And something that Marcus, like you, has to work at day after day.
It's not something you just work at once.
It's not something you're born with.
It's something you work at diligently and consistently a little bit each day.
And it's a process you start now
so you can get compounding returns
over the course of your life.
That's why we've built this,
what is actually the longest challenge in course
we've built here at Daily Stoke
because becoming a great leader takes time.
And to complete it with me,
you're going to have to complete nine weeks of work
and study and then hopefully carry some of these habits
with you going forward.
Each week is gonna be distinguished by a theme.
Week one is becoming a lifelong student of leadership.
Week two is about mastering near emotions.
Week three is about dealing with people.
Week four is about preparing for and surviving adversity.
Week five is about decision making.
Week six is about problem solving.
Week seven is about culture, week eight.
It's about developing your own leadership philosophy. And week nine is about the challenges of leadership.
Each day you get an email from me, it's 63 emails, more than 30,000 words of all new content
that helps you take the right steps along that week's path. And not only have we assembled
some of the best to a wisdom on what it takes to be a great leader. But we've also assembled some of today's great leaders to be for you, what Antoninus was
for Marcus.
Once a week, there's a leadership deep dive, a live video session with me, and a great
expert on that week's theme.
Their backgrounds vary from a major general in the Air Force, a leading psychologist who's
one of the top sighted scientists in the world,, a leading psychologist was one of the top cited scientists in the world,
and a leadership coach who's been studying
and advising some of the world's best leaders
for more than two decades,
and a GM of one of America's greatest sports dynasties.
Each is a leader in their own way, in their own field,
but we pick them all for the same reason
that they have proven hard one wisdom and insights
that we can benefit from.
I'll interview each guest to extract some of that wisdom and then we'll take questions
from some of the course participants.
There's going to be three leadership Q&As with me.
Again, a live office hours video session with me.
Ancient wisdom for the modern leader, it's going to be a master class in leadership with
the cadence and rigor of a bootcamp.
It's also a live course, which means all the participants will join the
course together.
We're going to move through it together with the same goal.
This is the only time you can sign up for it.
If you miss it, you can't sign up for it later.
So registration is open now at dailystilk.com slash leadership
challenge, but the registration is going to close this Saturday, July 31st
at midnight, central time.
We're really excited about this one. I 31st at midnight, central time. We're really excited
about this one. I think it's one of our best. And I can't wait for us to make each other
better. As Semicus says, we learn as we teach, and that's the premise here. So I can't
wait to have it. You can click the link in today's show notes or just go to dailystoke.com
slash leadership challenge.
Keeping the news in check.
Even the ancient news felt inundated with gossip and news.
This week you will face a barrage like they couldn't have imagined.
From texts, calls, emails to the incessant grind of the 24-7 news machine.
Instead of responding to every status update, every urgent call or the latest trending
incendiary news story,
take a moment to remember the three ways that the Stokes
used to keep their focus on their purpose
and duty in the present moment.
Number one, step away from the noise.
Two, remember that no news can throw you off the purpose
of your present choices.
Three, don't add something negative or positive
to what's being reported.
This is from this week's entry in the Daily Stoke Journal, 366 days of writing and reflection
on the art of living by yours truly and my colleague, Steven Hanselman, who I also wrote
the Daily Stoke with.
You can actually get signed copies of the Daily Stoke Journal in the Daily Stoke store at
store.dailystoke.com.
Or we've got copies here at the painted porch. My bookstore
in Bastrop, Texas, always popular, people ask me to sign them all the time. Anyways, check
out the Daily Stoke Journal. I'm on like my fourth year of doing it. You might like it
as well. But here's two quotes from Marcus and one from Epictetus to guide you this week.
Are you distracted by breaking news? Then take some leisure time to learn something good and stop bouncing around.
But when you do keep in mind the other mistake, to be so distracted by getting control that you
wear yourself out and lose a purpose by which you can direct your thoughts and impulses.
That's meditations 27. Epic Titus' Discourses 38 says,
whenever disturbing news is delivered to you, bear in mind that no news can be relevant
to your reasoned choice.
Can anyone break news to you that your assumptions or desires are wrong no way?
But they can tell you someone died.
But even so, what is that to you?
And then Marks realizes meditations, 849.
He says, don't tell yourself anything more than what the initial impressions report.
It's been reported to you that someone is speaking badly about you.
This is the report.
The report wasn't that you've been harmed.
I see that my son is sick, but not that his life is at risk.
So always stay within your first impressions and don't add them to your head.
This way, nothing can happen to you.
The number one secret to a good, productive routine and personal happiness is to limit
your news consumption.
Obviously, I'm biased as an author, but read books, don't watch the news.
Read thoughtful perennial analysis, don't follow speculative news reports.
Limit your news consumption.
And like, honestly, if you do feel like you need the distraction, you need
like a palakunzer, don't pull up CNN, pull up ESPN, like read about sports or something,
right? Read celebrity gossip. Don't read the latest divisive piece of news. I'm not saying
that it's not important to be informed. Of course, it's important to be informed. I would just argue that following the infinite news machine
is how one becomes informed. I think, as I've said before, the great influenza, a book
that I read at the beginning of the pandemic, taught me much more about how to spend the
last 15 months than, you know, any breaking news story, because the news story's never
really changed anything. It's like, hey, this thing is real.
Here's the scientific advice.
Take it seriously.
Wait for it to be over, right?
The latest report is only adding to what we already know for the most part.
So step back.
Don't consume so much news.
Couple recommendations on that's front.
Obviously, one, my book Trust Me I'm Lying is about how the news manipulates you.
But there's a great book by Daniel Borsden called The Image
that I suggest people read.
There's also Neil Postman's amusing ourselves to death.
These are two eye-opening books that will give you a sense
of why you should consume as little news as possible,
and how manipulative it is, and how harmful it is.
And then the other book, which inspired my book Trust Me I, I'm lying, if you read the jungle as a kid
in high school or whatever,
Epton Sinclair's exposé of the meat packing industry,
then I strongly suggest you read his book, The Brass Check,
which is actually an exposé of the news industry
around the same time.
And sadly, almost nothing has changed.
I'm not saying that reporters aren't good people.
I'm not saying that they don't do an important public service.
I'm not saying I read no news.
I'm just saying, look, the most viral emotion is anger.
Should it surprise us that the news
perpetually makes us angry, right?
Should it surprise us that news is always breaking
but never fully arrives, that they're always speculating?
No, it's an enormous beast trying to capture as much attention as much attention as possible to then sell that attention to advertisers.
You are the product that's being sold and you consume this free news.
Gotta understand that.
Listen to podcasts, podcasts are great conversations.
Even this, like I'm recording this, but it has no real date on it.
It should be relevant forever.
So I'm not as incentivized to rile you up
the way that your news is.
So I think it's interesting that even 2000 years ago,
the Stokes were struggling with it.
They'd be appalled at what our information diet is today.
So step back, give yourself some space. Don't follow breaking news, don't let it change,
who you are, don't let it rattle your equilibrium.
Just keep doing you read books, study real wisdom
and information that will make you smarter,
and able to respond to what's happening in the world
and make you a better, more informed citizen. Hey, Prime Members, you can listen to the Daily Stoic early and ad-free on Amazon Music,
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