The Daily Stoic - This is the Critical Difference | There is Philosophy in Everything
Episode Date: March 24, 2022Ryan talks about how parents can shape the fate of their kids, about how everything we do for others comes back to us, and reads The Daily Stoic’s entry of the day.Sign up for the Daily Sto...ic email: http://DailyStoic.com/emailFollow 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.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, prime members, you can listen to the Daily Stoic Podcast early and add free on Amazon Music. Download the app today.
Welcome to another episode of the Daily Stoic Podcast. On Thursdays, we do double duty, not just reading our daily meditation,
reading our daily meditation, but also reading a passage from the book, the daily Stoic, 366 meditations on wisdom, perseverance in the art of living, which I wrote with my
wonderful co-author and collaborator, Steve Enhancelman.
And so today we'll give you a quick meditation from one of the Stoics, from Epititus 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.
Hi, I'm David Brown, the host of Wanderer's podcast business wars.
And in our new season, Walmart must fight off target, the new discounter that's both
savvy and fashion forward.
Listen to business wars on Amazon Music or wherever you get your podcasts.
This is the critical difference. Marcus Aurelius and Nero had remarkably similar early lives.
Both were not obvious selections for the throne. Both were told early that supreme power was
in their future. Both lost their fathers young. Both were given Stoke
teachers, rusticists to Marcus and Sena Katanero. Both were tutored in philosophy. So why
did Marcus turn out to be Marcus and Nero to be Nero? Well, was one brilliant and just
the other vicious and unhinged? In my discussion with the author and historian Barry Strouse on
the Daily Stoke podcast, one possible explanation emerged. It was their mothers that made the difference.
Marcus's mother, he writes in book One of Meditations, was generous, unable to even conceive of
doing wrong and lived simply not in the least like the rich. Nero's mother, on the other hand,
was calculating and ambitious, uncaring and cruel. Marcus had another critical influence.
His beloved stepfather, Antoninus, who treated him like a son and modeled daily what good
leadership looked like.
In the end, no amount of talent or training or tutoring was enough to outweigh that critical
deficit for Nero.
It's just a reminder, parenting matters.
If you have kids, the most important
role philosophy can play in all of your lives is in guiding the example that you set for
them. And the principles you embody, in the standards you hold yourself to, this is the
area in which you can have true multi-generational impact, which is a bittersweet truth for
Marcus. He benefited from the positive influence of parents and role models who were guided by philosophy when he was young,
but as an adult, his own failings as a father with his son, Commodus, would undo almost all the good he himself did as Emperor.
Not as the critical difference between being a good person, a good leader, and being a good parent.
It's having positive influences early, and being a positive influence early and always.
The thing I'm most proud of doing that,
that I like doing the most each day
is I do a similar email and podcast called DailyDad.
You can sign up for the email at dailyDad.com.
We have a stoic parenting challenge there.
We have a parent to be challenge.
If you wanna check that out, if you're thinking about becoming a parent, and you know you're going to become a parent soon,
and then I am currently hard at work on a daily dad book, which I hope to be a companion to the
daily stillic and Robert Green's daily laws and the other daily books I've recommended here before.
So I'd love to have you sign up and go to dailydad.com to find the podcast or to sign up for the email. And I hope you check it out.
There is philosophy and everything.
And I'm reading to you today from the Daily Stoke,
366 Meditations on Wisdom Perseverance in the Art of Living
by yours truly, my co-author and translator,
Steve Enhancelman.
You can get signed copies, by the way, in the Daily Stoke store, over a million copies of the Daily Stoke and print now.
It's been just such a lovely experience to watch it. It's been more than 250 weeks,
consecutive weeks on the best cellos. It's just an awesome experience. But I hope you check it out.
We have a premium leather edition at store.dailystoke.com as well. But let's get on with today's reading.
Eat like a human being. drink like a human being,
dress up, marry, have children,
get politically active, suffer, abuse,
bear with a headstrong brother, father, son,
neighbor, or companion.
Show us these things so we can see
that you have truly learned from the philosophers.
That's Epictetus's discourses, 321.
Plutarcha, Roman biographer, as well as an admirer of the Stoics,
and sometimes critic of the Stoics, and as it happens, his grandson or nephew or not quite sure
becomes one of Mark's realises philosophy teachers. But anyways, the point is that he didn't
begin his study of the greats of Roman literature until late in life. But as he recounts in his biography of Demosthenes, he was surprised at how quickly it all came to him. He wrote, it wasn't
so much the words that brought me into full understanding of events, is that somehow
I had a personal experience of the events that allowed me to follow closely the meaning
of the words. And this is what Epictetus means about the study of philosophy too.
Study, yes, but live your life as well.
It's the only way you'll ever actually understand
what any of it means.
And more important, it's only from your actions
and choices over time that will be possible
to see whether you took any of the teachings to heart.
Be aware of that today when you're going to work,
going on a date,
deciding whom to vote for, calling your parents in the evening, waving to your neighbor as you walk
to your door, tipping the delivery man, saying goodnight to someone you love. All of this is philosophy.
All of it is experience that brings meaning to the words. I've talked about this a couple of times,
but as an example of this in my own life,
obviously I've read Marx to realize many, many times,
but in the pandemic, it just hit me in this different way.
I realize, well, pandemic and having kids,
there's two examples, but the pandemic, you know,
realizing, oh, he was writing this during the play
and that this was a lens of filter affecting the mood
and style and tone, and directing even
what he was thinking about.
And then so as we've gone through COVID,
I just came to understand Marcus in this whole other way.
My experiences, as Plutarch was saying,
my personal experience of events
allowed me to follow closely the meaning of the words,
or rather, it helped me understand the words at a deeper
More profound level
When I had Robin Waterfield on the podcast when we were talking about meditation
See us this great new translation annotated edition of marks really so she should check out we carried in the
Painted porch and I did like a three hour interview with him for the podcast
But as I was reading it I I just, I never really,
I obviously knew Mark's realist as a father.
But only once I had kids, I came to understand
some of the things that Markis was writing about
as a father more deeply, that there was,
that it was there hidden in plain sight.
This is that idea we don't step in the same room.
It tries to come back to the book,
you experience something different, it hits you different,
you're looking at it from a different angle,
your experiences are a form in what's going on. So realizing that Marcus was talking about having
children so often in his relationship with his children, it just, I got something different out
of the book. And then of course, COVID and parenting, you know, when you're just worried that something
could happen to your kids as many things did happen to Marcus, really, so this kids, I just got
something out of it at a deeper level. But that's not really what today's
episode is about or today's entries about. In fact, it's kind of about the
opposite. It's that words are important, of course, but philosophy is something
you do not something you say, right? Obviously, I've written a lot about the Stoic principles of, let's say, justice or generosity,
right?
That's me communicating about philosophy.
But I was just posting about this on Instagram.
I had this, a couple weeks ago, I had this idea.
I was like, I was seeing what was happening in Ukraine.
And I said, like, how can I make a difference?
How can I contribute?
What should I contribute?
What's my obligation to contribute?
And I had this idea, I had someone I'm in team,
I was like, you know those big stack of books,
like in the corner of the office,
all the international translations,
go through and give me all the Ukrainian
and Russian editions I had.
And then I texted my agent and I said,
hey, can you like run through a calculation
and tell me what the total revenues from me selling rights
to Russia and Ukraine have been over the last 10 years?
And he did that and then I took a photo in front of the store
and I just said, look, I feel overwhelmed by this.
I'm seeing the images on the news.
I don't know what to do about it,
but what I am gonna do is donate my royalties
from these two
Territories to the people who are being affected by what's happening right now and
I'm not saying this to Bradley go look at this nice thing
I did but what happened from doing that about a week later
I got a call from Tim Ferris and Tim said hey, I loved your posts
And I was what are you talking about the thing you post on Instagram?
No, you know we could go and buy it.
Oh, he was like, I meant the Ukraine thing.
And what had happened is that Tim had been thinking
about what he could do about it,
and he'd seen my post and he decided to do it.
And then Neil Strauss saw that Tim had posted it
and Robert Green saw that I put,
and all of a sudden all these authors decided
to do the same thing, right?
And I don't know what that adds up to,
but it's a lot of money donated to this thing.
And it came from me feeling coming from the seed
of what the Stokes say, which is our job
is to try to make the little bit of difference
within what's our control, right?
I don't know if I'm your prudent,
I can't tell him to stop doing this, right?
Like, I can't go over there and fight.
I'm not in a position to make policy decisions,
but I can try to do a little bit
within my own sphere,
I can try to put my money where my mouth is literally,
and I can try to apply the philosophy, follow the philosophy.
And then as it happens,
that creates a snowball effect that helps other people, And, you know, hopefully, and I've heard from a bunch of other
authors that are doing the same now. But the point is, that's what stoicism is. Not like me,
I'm the stoic, because look at what I did. But what I'm saying is that stoicism is not writing about
the things, thinking about the things. Stoicism is taking action on the things. It's putting the words
into practice. As Epochetic says, don't talk about the philosophy, embody it. That's
trickier for me as a writer about stosis, and that's literally my job. I do talk about
it, but I also have to try to be about it. As do you. So I hope, as you listen to Daily
Stoke, as you read the Daily Stoke, as you participate in this universe of stuff,
as a fellow traveler on this path.
I hope you understand that it's not just about
the inner work on yourself,
it's not just about being a little tougher,
a little more resilient focusing on what you control
mentally, it's also what you do.
How do you apply these ideas in the real world?
Which I tried to do here.
I call on you to do the same thing.
You can check it out on Instagram.
The charity I donated to, I donated to one
that's being put on by Flexport.
They're like a logistics company.
They're donating, they're handling logistics
of getting a whole bunch of items to refugees
and around Ukraine.
And then I also donated to a Ukrainian charity
called Come Back Alive,
which you can Google both of those and find them out.
But maybe this isn't the cause for you,
maybe it's not what speaks to you,
but what can you do?
Where can you not just talk about this stoic idea
of justice, but where can you actually be about it?
That's what we're talking about,
and I hope that inspires you a little bit as well.
Thanks so much for listening to the Daily Stoke podcast.
If you don't know this, you can get these delivered to you via email every day, check it
out at dailystoke.com slash email.
Hey Prime Members, you can listen to the Daily Stoke early and add free on Amazon Music,
download the Amazon Music app today, or you can listen early and add free with Wondery Plus
in Apple podcasts.
Raising kids can be one of the greatest rewards
of a parent's life.
But come on, someday, parenting is unbearable.
I love my kid, but is a new parenting podcast
from Wondery that shares a refreshingly honest and insightful
take on parenting.
Hosted by myself, Megan Galey, Chris Garcia, and Kurt Brownleur, we will be your resident
not-so-expert experts.
Each week we'll share a parenting story that'll have you laughing, nodding, and thinking.
Oh yeah, I have absolutely been there.
We'll talk about what went right and wrong.
What would we do differently?
And the next time you step on yet another stray Lego
in the middle of the night, you'll feel less alone.
So if you like to laugh with us as we talk about
the hardest job in the world, listen to,
I love my kid, but wherever you get your podcasts.
You can listen ad free on the Amazon Music or Wondery app.
your podcasts. You can listen ad-free on the Amazon Music or Wondery app.