The Daily Stoic - This Is What It Takes To Lead | The Enemy of Happiness
Episode Date: February 17, 2025As Truman also said, not all readers are leaders, but there is nothing better to start you on the path to leadership than reading great books. 📚 Check out The Painted Porch for your next b...ook: https://www.thepaintedporch.com/📔 Pick up your own leather bound signed edition of The Daily Stoic! Check it out at the Daily Stoic Store: https://store.dailystoic.com/🎙️ 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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Years before he became president, Harry Truman
owned a clothing store that doubled as a local hangout. A kid named
Albert Ridge would often head there
after his shift at the neighborhood grocery store.
For the rest of his life,
Ridge would tell the story of the time
that Truman gave him a list of 10 books to read.
It included books like Plutarch's Lives,
Caesar's Commentaries, and Benjamin Franklin's Autobiography.
Al, Truman had said,
"'You'll find a good deal in there
about how to make use of every minute
of your day and a lot of horse sense about people.
It's reminiscent of one of the formative scenes in Marcus Aurelius' life.
As a young man, he was given a copy of the Lectures of Epictetus.
He would read through it again and again on his way to becoming one of the great kings
of history.
He would thank his teacher, Rusticus, for changing his life with that single recommendation.
Albert Ridge's life was also changed
by the books he was recommended.
He learned a lot about people
and how to make the most of his time,
just as Truman had promised.
He started going to law school at night
and then went on to be a United States circuit judge
under President Kennedy.
From the neighborhood grocery store
to the U.S. federal court, from a promising young
boy to the head of the Roman Empire, from a farm in Missouri to the presidency of the
United States, that's the power of reading.
As Truman also said, not all readers are leaders, but there is nothing better to start you on
the path to leadership than reading great books.
The enemy of happiness. This is from today's entry in the Daily Stout.
It's quite impossible to unite happiness with a yearning for that which we don't have.
Happiness has all that it wants and resembles the well-fed. There wouldn't be hunger or thirst. That's Epictetus's Discourses 324. I'll be happy when I graduate, we tell ourselves.
I'll be happy when I get this promotion, when this diet pays off, when I have the money that my parents never had.
Conditional happiness is what psychologists call
this kind of thinking.
Like the horizon, you could walk for miles and miles
and miles and never reach it.
You'll never get any closer.
Eagerly anticipating some future event,
passionately imagining something you desire, looking forward
to some happy scenario. As pleasurable as these activities might seem, they ruin your chances at
happiness here and now. So locate that yearning for more, for better, for someday, and see it
for what it is, the enemy of your contentment, choose it or your happiness.
As Epictetus says, the two are not compatible."
That's a heavy one, I think, the idea that yearning is the enemy of happiness.
Sometimes I'll talk to really successful people who have like a lot of money and be like,
what are you doing?
Like, why don't you just relax or whatever?
I always find it fascinating when you hear
that they have a number.
So maybe they have a million dollars,
but their number is $10 million.
Maybe they have $10 million
or their number is $100 million.
They've told themselves that when they get X, then they'll be okay, then they'll
be good. From a different Zeno, there's this Zeno's paradox, the idea of if you're walking
from here to the other side of the room and you go halfway there and then halfway there
and then halfway there and then halfway there, they'll never actually arrive, right? Because
it's always half, there's always more.
There's always some half left of the distance.
But I think that's kind of what yearning is.
We tell ourselves, oh, when I get this,
when I get this, when I get this,
but we never get there either because
it's not actually something that a person can possess
or because we move the goal posts.
Like, oh, all I wanna do is win a championship.
And then you do it and then you're,
oh, all I wanna do is win back to back championships
to prove it wasn't a fluke.
And it's like, oh, but now I wanna win it on a different team
to prove that it wasn't a fluke there either.
Whatever it is, right?
We move the goal posts.
That's the tricky thing about yearning
is it never gets there.
I think it's still in the key,
but there's a quote I love from Stefan Zweig, the novelist.
And he says, in the history of conquerors,
no conqueror has ever been surfeited by conquests.
Alexander the Great said,
aren't we gonna conquer the world together?
And his men said, no't we going to conquer the world together? And his men said,
no, we want to go home. And the truth was he always would have found something new,
something beyond it, always would have kept pushing. And the result of that was he not
only lost his life, but I think he lost a lot of happiness as well. So contentment,
and I've read a study many years
ago that said young people associate happiness with accomplishment, older people with contentment.
I think they've learned something along the way. It's a hard one lesson, I'm sure.
Even if we can't fully internalize it or understand it or accept it now,
we can try to approximate it. We can try to incorporate some of it, we can fake it till we make
it, which is that we don't need anything. We can be happy now. That doesn't mean that we don't keep
trying. Of course we keep trying. Of course we keep doing. But we try to do those things from
a place of fullness, from a place of that'll be a nice extra, as opposed to a place of yearning
that I'll be happy if this, once this, after that.
It doesn't happen, man.
It's a myth.
It's a shimmer.
It's a mirage.
You'll get there and you will realize
it was a figment of your imagination,
or worse, your mind will fool you so much
you won't even realize you're there.
It just feel like, ah, I just gotta go a little bit further,
a little bit further, a little bit further. And you never arrive and at the cost comes your life
and your happiness. But for people who don't want to do things, this is not a particularly important
or tricky subject. For those of us who are ambitious, those of us who are driven, those
of us who are talented, it's something we really have to wrestle with. So I'm wishing you the best. You're enough as you are. Yearning is the enemy of your happiness. Remember that.
Be safe, be well, everyone. We'll talk soon.
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