The Daily Stoic - This Also Cannot Be Taken (Only Given Up) | Ask Daily Stoic
Episode Date: June 26, 2025Why should a Stoic let the awfulness of the world make them feel awful? Why would we let someone else’s darkness cast a shadow on our own life?📕 Book mentioned: Trust Me I’m Lying by R...yan Holiday 📖 Preorder the final book in Ryan Holiday's The Stoic Virtues Series: "Wisdom Takes Work": https://store.dailystoic.com/pages/wisdom-takes-work🎙️ Follow The Daily Stoic Podcast on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/dailystoicpodcast🎥 Watch top moments from The Daily Stoic Podcast on YouTube: https://www.youtube.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.
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This also cannot be taken, only given up.
There was Nero, there was Vespasian,
there was Tiberius and Caesar and Sulla and many others.
The Stoics lived in the time of tyrants.
They lived in a time of chaos and dysfunction and danger.
They had real reasons to worry
about their property being confiscated,
about losing their job to an emperor or events,
about being sent into exile. about their property being confiscated, about losing their job to an emperor or events,
about being sent into exile.
They knew all this was largely out of their control, but as we talked about recently,
they understood that they still possessed many things that could not be taken away,
only given up.
One of those things was their dignity and self-respect.
Epictetus kept it even in slavery.
Thrasia and Agrippinus kept it during the
reign of Nero.
But there is another thing that we always have the capacity to possess, something not
associated with Stoicism often enough, but just as important, and that is happiness and
joy.
Why should the Stoics have let the awfulness of the world make them feel awful?
Why should they have let someone else's darkness darken their own life?
When Marcus Aurelius spoke of getting revenge by not being like that,
this is partly what he was referencing.
How do you strike back against a cruel and deranged leader?
How do you undermine a morally bankrupt regime or times?
By being good and feeling good, by loving your children, by loving literature and art,
by smiling to your neighbor,
by helping a sick animal you find on the side of the road,
by laughing at the absurdities,
both of the administrations and at the absurdities of life.
Do not let them touch your inner citadel.
No one can steal your happiness. No one can steal your happiness.
No one can take your joy.
This is ours to keep or give up.
Choose wisely.
Hey, it's Ryan.
Welcome to another episode of the Daily Stoke podcast.
On Thursday, we do Q and A's.
You do this long enough and it all
starts to blur together. It's crazy to me. So I was in Salt Lake City a couple of months ago.
I gave a talk to YPO. It's pretty cool. And then I had to get on a plane early that morning and
fly from Salt Lake City to Phoenix where I was going to talk to Dean Graziosi's mastermind group,
which is called Zenith.
And here I am now back in Salt Lake City.
Actually, I flew into Salt Lake City.
Now I'm in Sundance.
I drove about an hour, got a nice run-in.
I sit down to record this intro,
which Claire, my producer, prepped for me.
And I go, oof, you really do come full circle.
I'm gonna bring you today a chunk of that Q&A,
which we've been doing the last couple weeks. And
the idea that I was like, I knew when I landed in the airport in Salt Lake City, I was like,
I was here recently, right? When was that? Was I passing through? Did I leave the airport?
And then I had to go meet the driver or whatever and say, okay, yeah, yeah, I remember I go
down here and it just all starts to blur together, which is both, I think, a good and a bad sign.
It means you're doing a lot,
means you're doing cool stuff.
It also means you're becoming a little bit jaded.
It's kind of just fading into the background.
And so I did, as I was driving out here,
just try to really soak in the insane scenery
and I make sure I do that on the way back.
It can be so easy just to be like house, plane,
hotel, restaurant, room, conference room, car, airport, home.
And you wanna slow down and you wanna soak it in.
And that's actually something I talked about
in the talk with Dean.
It's about what we do every day.
It's not saying, oh, this doesn't matter,
or this isn't important, or oh, it's all adding up to something. It's about what we do every day, it's not saying, oh, this doesn't matter. Oh, this isn't important or oh,
it's all adding up to something.
It's about what we do every day.
Thanks to Dean for having me come talk to Zenith.
He was a very nice host.
He gave everyone a copy of Ego is the Enemy.
And now I get to bring you a chunk of that Q&A.
So enjoy.
Kids don't do what you do or tell them to do.
They become who you are or by example, lead by example.
So I'd love to know from you, what are some of the things maybe you would love to teach
them, but you're not sure if the teaching or the reading would do it, but you've shifted
your life because you know it would be a good example?
Well, my wife likes to joke that one of us writes about stoicism and then the other is
the stoic.
And so.
I think I got it figured out.
Yeah, so I struggle with all of these things,
but I actually think that's one of the things
I want my kids to understand.
You talked about going upstairs and apologizing
when you've screwed up or I'm gonna try that again.
I can remember my parents apologizing like twice
in my whole life.
Do you know what I mean?
Even now.
I'm glad you got two.
Even now if I would bring up something for my child
that they would say, that didn't happen.
What are you talking about?
Even now, if they could be like, hey, when you were six,
I would feel better about it.
Exactly.
Don't move on my part.
Decades later, it would still make me feel better.
And so I do try to get better.
I'm a big fan.
Do you guys know who Dr. Becky is?
She's amazing.
She talks about like, don't try to be a perfect parent,
try to get better at repair, right?
Like fixing it after.
And that's one of the things I'm trying to do by example.
And I got this email from my son's teacher yesterday.
I was like almost in tears about it.
He was running across the playground
and he smacked into someone.
And she sent us this note about how he'd hurt this other kid,
and he was checking on them, and he went and got the nurse.
And that's something he's kind of struggled with.
He sometimes, when he gets embarrassed or he screws up,
he has shame, and it makes him not
want to address what happened and think about it.
We all do that.
And so I've tried to model not doing that.
Like you can't, you can't yell at someone out of that cycle, right?
Cause that's where it comes from.
And so I've tried to get better at repair, not that he necessarily has ever
showed that he's appreciated it or noticed it, but then you get this thing.
And you're like, oh, it clearly worked at some level, right?
And so I think not trying to be perfect,
but having some semblance of self-awareness
to be able to go, hey, I'm stressed
because I'm trying to get everyone to the airport
and on the plane at the right time
because I planned this special thing for everyone.
That's why I was being this way,
which is defeating the whole point of us being together.
But I'm having the awareness as soon as possible the special thing for everyone. That's why I was being this way, which is defeating the whole point of us being together.
But I'm having the awareness as soon as possible
that that's why I'm being the way that I was being
and then talking about it and acknowledging it.
I think it would all be wonderful
to have successful accomplished kids,
but to have kids with self-awareness,
I wear her feet.
I've said if it was my last breath and I said,
I've created kids that have awareness
and they're resourceful and they're happy.
I don't care about any of the rest.
Because they're going to figure, they're set for life.
That's the whole toolkit.
That's the whole toolkit, right?
And I do think I had a friend of mine who was a mentor when I was 15 years older than
me.
He was the first guy I'd ever known that had a hundred million dollar a year business.
I'm like, there's businesses to a hundred million? And I remember talking to him and he said,
it was when my daughter was first born, she's 18.
So it was 18 years ago.
He said, remember at the end of your life,
all the things you accomplish,
I want you to accomplish a million things.
But I think the last thing you're gonna think of is,
did I do everything in my power to give my kids the tools
to live a fulfilled life? And I think about that all the time.
Sometimes you have a true north, that's my true north.
Am I doing the things to make them resilient,
to make them have resources,
but are they resourceful?
If I could pick one,
you can't give your kids anything,
but you can make them resourceful,
pick resourcefulness 100 percent of the time.
Well, it's interesting how timeless that is.
There's this ancient writer named Plutarch, he's one of the great biographers, and he
lives shortly before Marx realized.
And he noted with some irony that, you know, people will spend a lot of time trying to
craft the perfect will and the perfect executor for their estate so their kids don't fight
each other, so they don't get too much money or not enough money.
And this is, you know, all the estate planning you do
and he was just like, what if you just raised kids
that got along and could manage these things?
You know, not that you don't-
No, I get it.
But his point is like, you can try to have this
perfect system for these imperfect flawed people
or you could just not screw them up and, you know,
they can manage it, right?
And I think, you know, we just often end up prioritizing or spending
our energy on the thing that's easier and we're more comfortable with.
That is-
Such a good point. It's so funny when I,
first generation of actually making money,
you have to think about those things.
Sure.
Trust and how you're going to hand it off.
I remember going through it and I read a letter and I have to find it, but I read
a letter that was written by somebody who studied families.
This is something hopefully all of you can benefit from, but it was families in Europe,
in England that went many, many generations.
I feel like I'm exaggerating to say 20 generations.
I'm already telling my four-year-old is that we're a baton family.
And I ran the first leg of the race.
And I would love to hand the baton off you to continue it.
But if you don't want it, it's okay.
But you're not just gonna get handed.
I wanna give you opportunity.
Right, are they inheriting the estate,
just the products, the money or whatever,
or are they also inheriting a tradition?
Right, a set of values. A culture, a values.
Yeah, and then hopefully a model,
Bruce Springsteen has talked about this.
He says, are you gonna be an ancestor
to your kids or a ghost?
Right? Wow.
An ancestor is this thing you look to
that you're inspired by that you wanna make proud.
And a ghost is like, oh yeah, I do that
cause my dad was like that or whatever, right?
Like we're all haunted by these ghosts of five generations ago, right?
Someone was an alcoholic, the past of this past of that.
And so his point is like, do you want to, to me, that's a really critical choice.
And are you going to be someone that sort of builds up and inspires and calls to your kids?
Or are you going to be someone that haunts and plagues them and scares them? So good. Ryan's got to run out of here and go jump on a plane. We got time for a question
or two. Who'd like to ask? Go for it. Your book, Trust Me, I'm Lying, changed my life. Oh, that is
a crazy read. And if you haven't read it, highly recommend it. Amazing book. Teaches like just all
about marketing. Probably give a synopsis real quick to people, but give me a updated 2025 version
of how much we are being deceived by media
and marketing with the political campaign, pandemic.
I'm just curious your thoughts
and with that frame on the world right now.
Yeah, I wrote a book about fake news
and media manipulation in 2011,
which I wished had been proven wrong subsequently.
And, you know, I think we're living in the hellscape
that I was predicting in that book, unfortunately.
I think what we're coming to understand is that information is a public good,
like air pollution or water or the oceans.
And as we've allowed these different entities, some government, some private actors,
some foreign actors, some crazy people to sort of poison that. And as the media's, as
their economics have changed, they've gotten worse and worse at protecting that. And we're
just so hard to know what's true and real and important these days.
Hey, it's Ryan.
Thank you for listening to the Daily Stoic podcast.
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