The Daily Stoic - Things Don’t Make The Man
Episode Date: May 27, 2019It’s very easy to associate our possessions and our positions with our identity. There’s even an expression to that effect: The clothes make the man. When we have a powerful job, we feel ...powerful. When the market is hot, we feel like we have a knack for investing. When we are number one in our space, in our industry, in sales, we’re very into checking and monitoring the rankings. When people are saying nice things about us, we revel in it, because of course it’s all true and deserved.If everything stays well, it’s hard to see what the downside of this approach is (excepting the ego that can often creep in). It’s only when the screw turns that we realize how dangerous this has all been. Because when you associate your identity with externals when things are good, it’s impossible not to associate your identity when suddenly the same externals are showing you to be a loser or a fool or the object of other people’s contempt.The Stoics would urge you to remember that things don’t make the man. Not now, not ever. Epictetus reminds us that just because someone has more money than you doesn’t make them superior. No, only their bank balance is superior. If someone is an eloquent speaker, that doesn’t make them better than you either. It just means they have better diction. “You yourself,” he says, “are neither property nor diction.”Nope. You’re you. And you’re not measured or made by externals, or anything that is outside your control. What matter is who you are on the inside. What matters is what you do with the choices and situations that are inside your control. What matters is how you ride out the highs and the lows, and ideally are changed by neither of them.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.
insight, wisdom necessary for living good life. Each one of these passages is based on the 2000-year-old philosophy that has guided some of
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Things don't make the man. It's very easy to associate our possessions and our positions
with our identity. There's even an expression to that effect, the clothes make the man.
When we have a powerful job, we feel powerful.
The market is hot.
We feel like we have a knack for investing.
When we are number one in our space and our industry and sales,
we're very into checking and monitoring the rankings when people are saying nice
things about us, we
revel in it. Because of course, it's all true and deserved. If everything stays well,
it's hard to see what the downside of this approach is, accepting the ego that can often
creep in. It's only when the screw turns that we realize how dangerous this has been.
Because when you associate your identity with externals,
when things are good,
it's impossible not to associate your identity
when all those externals are showing you to be a loser
or a fool or the object of other people's contempt.
The Stokes would urge you to remember
that things don't make the man, not now, not ever. Epic Titus reminds us that
just because someone has more money than you doesn't make them superior, no only their
bank balance is superior. If someone is an eloquent speaker, that doesn't make them better
than you either. Just means they have better diction. You yourself, he says, are neither property nor diction. No, you're
you. And you're not measured or made by externals or anything that is outside your control. What matters
is who you are on the inside. What matters is what you do with the choices and situations that are
inside your control. What matters is how you ride out the highs and the lows, and ideally are changed by neither
of them.
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