The Daily Stoic - Not Just To Read, But To Read Critically | Stop Monkeying Around
Episode Date: July 8, 2021“An illiterate world is not a good one, but a world where people unthinkingly believe and accept everything they read is not that much better. So it’s great that you’re reading—but ar...e you reading critically?”Ryan explains the importance of honing your reading practice, and reads The Daily Stoic’s entry of the day, on today’s Daily Stoic Podcast.Blinkist is the app that gets you fifteen-minute summaries of the best nonfiction books out there. Blinkist lets you get the topline information and the most important points from the most important nonfiction books out there, whether it’s Ryan’s own The Daily Stoic, Yuval Harari’s Sapiens, and more. Go to blinkist.com/stoic, try it free for 7 days, and save 25% off your new subscription, too.Sign 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 Stood Podcast early and add free on Amazon Music. Download the app today.
Hi, I'm David Brown, the host of Wundery's podcast business wars. And in our new season, Walmart must fight off target.
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music or wherever you get your podcasts. Welcome to another episode of the Daily Stoic Podcast.
On Thursdays we do double duty, not just reading our daily meditation, but also reading a passage
from the book The Daily Stoic, 366 meditations on wisdom, perseverance, and the art of living, which I wrote with
my wonderful co-author and collaborator, Stephen Hanselman.
And so today we'll give you a quick meditation from one of the Stoics, from Epictetus Markis
Relius, Seneca, then some analysis for me, and then we send you out into the world to
do your best to turn these words into works.
Not just to read, but to read critically. And a literate world is not a good one,
but a world where people unthinkingly believe
and accept everything they read is not much better.
So it's great that you're teaching your kids to read.
It's great that you are reading,
but are you reading critically?
You need to know authors can be wrong, authors
can be questioned. A book is not a one-way conversation. It's a dialogue between the
reader and the writer. You have to take notes. You have to disagree. You have to question
what you see on the page. Everyone needs to know. No book is definitive. No one's school
or system has all the answers. You have to read books by opposing thinkers,
read one book after another,
then read something that presents a different point of view.
You have to realize the importance of debate.
You have to understand how to compare and contrast.
We've talked about the dangerous world of ideas.
You're gonna have to look at things you disagree with.
You're gonna have to have tastes.
You're gonna have to talk and learn from people
who have different opinions than you.
It's going to mean going down rabbit holes you never thought of before.
Remember what Epictida said just because someone spends time reading doesn't mean they're
smart.
It matters how and what you read.
So start this practice today.
Start it now.
Be a real reader, a wide-ranging, critical reader, a questioner, a reviewer, a thinker.
Stop monkeying around. Enough of this miserable,
whining life, stop monkeying around. Why are you troubled? What's new here? What's so confounding?
The one responsible, take a look, or just the matter itself, then look at that. There's nothing else to look at.
And as far as the gods go by now, you could be trying to be more straightforward and kind.
It's the same, whether you've examined these things for a hundred years or only three.
Arcuserrelius' Meditations 937.
From today's entry in the daily stoic, expertly translated by the one and only Steve Hanselman.
The meditation coming from me,
this is 366 meditations on wisdom,
perseverance in the art of living, the Daily Stoic.
You can get anywhere books or sold,
you can also get a leather-bound edition
in the Daily Stoic store.
Here's today's meditation,
and then we'll riff on it a bit here.
Character, Joan Didian would write in one of her best essays,
is the willingness
to accept responsibility for one's own life, and is the source from which self-respect springs.
Marcus Aurelius urged us not to waste time complaining about what we haven't got or how things
have worked out. We have to quit monkeying around and be owners of our own lives. Character can
be developed in what it is, self-respect will ensue, but that means
starting and getting serious about it.
Not later, not after certain questions have been answered
or distractions have been dealt with, but now,
right now, taking responsibility is the first step.
To be without this respect is the worst of all fates.
As Didian put it in her essay on self-respect to live without self-respect is to lie awake some night beyond the reach of warm milk, the
phenobarbital and the sleeping hand on the coverlet, counting up the sins of commission
and omission, the truspotray, the promises subtly broken, the gifts irrevocably wasted through
sloth or cowardice or carelessness.
We are all so much better than that.
I love in meditations, you hear Marcus, you know, saying stuff like this to himself.
Stop monkeyin' around.
How much longer are you gonna wait?
He says, you're an old man now and you're still struggling with this.
I love the vulnerability there.
Like, he's not telling you to stop monkeyin' around.
He's telling himself to stop monkeyin' around. And by extension Also you, but the point is this is directed on himself because we all
struggle with it. We all get distracted. We all get, you know, complaining and whiny and
obnoxious and entitled, but we have to stop. With the stop munking around, we have to get serious. We
have to take responsibility for own lives, for our own actions. Yes, things
happen in the world. Yes, things are unfair. Yes, things suck. Yes, there are injustices that need
to be addressed at large. But you are responsible for your own habits. You're responsible for what
time you woke up this morning. You're responsible for the standard you hold yourself to. You are responsible for what you say, what you do.
Right?
We are responsible for ourselves and our own emotions.
You can't make me angry, as my wife says to me sometimes,
you can't make me frustrated, we are responsible for ourselves.
And when we do things where we have
abstained from this responsibility, I take no
responsibility at all. Trump famously said, this is the most shameless, shameful thing
that a person can do. But this is an important stoic concept, right? The stoics say, don't
take responsibility. I sometimes contrast doses and Christianity. It's not they're saying,
take responsibility. God says so,
or if you don't take responsibility,
you're gonna end up in hell.
The Stoics are saying,
and I think this is what Didian captures so well,
is that to not take responsibility
over the course of a life ultimately is a form of hell.
It is a miserable way to live, as she said,
it's to be beyond the reach of comforts, the drugs, the sleep,
relief. It is a miserable way to live. So take responsibility for your life. Stop blaming
others own what is in your control. Deal with it. Take it seriously. Do your best. Do
good as we were talking about last week.
And you might not always succeed. You might not be rewarded for it. You may well be punished for it.
You may not get what you want, but, but you can look yourself in the mirror.
You can know you did your best. You can know you're trying. And you can know that on a long enough timeline
you will be vindicated and it will work out.
Be good everyone. Take responsibility, talk to you next time.
And of course, this is what we built the Daily Stoke
Read to Lead Challenge about.
It's like two weeks of awesome,
stoic inspired reading practices,
so reading practices I try to use in my own
sort of self-driven educational process.
It served me well, it served the stoics of old well.
I think you'll get a lot out of it.
Check it out dailystoke.com slash read to lead.
And again, daily stoke life, members get all our courses for free, which you can sign
up for at dailystokelife.com.
Hey, prime members.
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