The Daily Stoic - This Is What Leaders Do | On Handling Haters
Episode Date: September 18, 2023After a long line of incompetence, after a long chain of excuses, after a series of failures, the Union cause finally turned around when General Ulysses S. Grant took command. Other generals ...had focused on pomp and circumstance, they had been anxious and defensive, they claimed they didn’t have the resources or troops they needed.As the great historian Bruce Catton wrote in The Hallowed Ground, “when Grant showed up things began to happen.” It didn’t matter if he was in charge of a small army or a big one, he was a leader and when leaders arrive, they make a difference.---And in today's reading from the Daily Stoic Journal, Ryan explains why it's so important to remember the idea that "hurt people hurt people" when thinking about how to respond to haters.💪 Visit store.dailystoic.com/pages/leadership to sign up for in the Daily Stoic Leadership Challenge before September 25th.✉️ Sign up for the Daily Stoic email: https://dailystoic.com/dailyemail🏛 Check out the Daily Stoic Store for Stoic inspired products, signed books, and more.📱 Follow us: Instagram, Twitter, YouTube, TikTok, 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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Hello, I'm Hannah.
And I'm Seruti.
And we are the hosts of a Red Handed, a weekly true crime podcast.
Every week on Red Handed, we yet stuck into the most talked about cases.
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Welcome to the Daily Stoic podcast. Each day we bring you a meditation inspired by the ancient Stoic's illustrated with stories from history, current events, and literature to help you be better
at what you do. And at the beginning of the week we try to do a deeper dive setting a kind of stoic intention for the week something to meditate on something to think on
something to leave you with to journal about whatever it is you happen to be
doing so let's get into it.
This is what leaders do. After a long line of incompetence, after a long chain of excuses, after a series of failures,
the union caused finally turn around when General Eulissi's S grant took command.
Other generals had been focused on pomp and circumstance.
They had been anxious and
defensive. They had claimed that they didn't have the resources or the troops that they needed.
As the great historian Bruce Catton wrote in the hollowed ground, when Grant showed up, things began
to happen. It didn't matter if he was in charge of a small army or a big one. He was a leader,
and when leaders arrived, they make a difference. A staff officer noted the same thing. We began to see things move, he noted, of Grants' rescue
of a besieged army. We felt that everything came from a plan. He came into the army quietly,
no splendor, no heirs, no staff. He used to go about alone. He began the campaign the moment he
reached the field. Everything was done like music. Everything was in harmony.
This was a lesson that Marcus really learned from the emperor Hadrian, who spent nearly the
entirety of his reign touring the empire. He would show up in a city that had languished
at his backwater and started a series of public improvements. He would come upon troops
that had grown fat and lazy and put them to work building fortifications, many of which
still stand.
He made reforms.
He replaced ineffective bureaucracy.
He restored temples.
He solved problems.
A leader isn't a figurehead there.
A doer.
They are a solver of problems.
They are in command of themselves, confident in themselves.
And this feeling is contagious.
They make things happen.
They help the people around them make things happen.
And this is not random or a result of their authority. It's because of their skill. They are playing
their instrument, making music, creating harmony and progress. And you can do this too if you learn
the art. And basically, the art of leadership, the stoic art of leadership is what this new challenge
we're launching.
Right now, it starts on the 26, so you don't have much time left.
That's what the daily stoic leadership challenge is all about.
It's a real deep dive, intensive look at the art of leadership.
The art of making things happen.
That's one of the things we talk about in the daily stoic leadership challenge, which
I think is one of the best things we've done.
We actually got some advice from a two-star general in the Air Force, so you can listen
to that as part of the challenge.
One of the best interviews I think that we've done.
Lots of great lessons in there, and there's a reason.
So many people have taken and loved the challenge.
It's a six plus week course on leadership, but it's really digestible.
It won't overload you, and it'll give you actual tangible stuff you can use
I can't wait for you to check it out go to daily stowach.com slash leadership
Or you can check out the leadership challenge at store.dailystowach.com and I'll link to it in today's show notes
On handling haters, the Stoics taught that kindness trumps hate.
They believed that those who engage in hate are prisoners to a destructive passion.
One that hurts the practitioner, not the intended target.
There's no reason to hate a hate or they are already suffering enough.
In fact, when we see them this way, it makes it easier to be kind,
good-natured, genuine, and useful. Remember that line in the Bible about how loving your enemies
is like pouring hot coals on them, because it's so unexpected. Well, what can surprise you that way?
Whose enmity can you meet with kindness and compassion and how much better do you feel when you've done so?
You know, this is something I've struggled with a bit recently.
And you know, sometimes I have fun with it.
Sometimes I like to stir it up a bit.
I try not to get angry about it.
Something that makes me angry,
but there is a part of it that makes me really sad,
really frustrated because it's not that
I can't take it.
I can take it.
But what I understand is how these ideas are rippling through and influencing other people
making them do or making them fall prey to misinformation or participate in anti-social
behavior.
But I do try to remember this idea that hurt people, hurt people. And as a great
expression, I found it to be very true in my life. But I thought I would give you that
thought as we get into today's quotes. The first is from Mark's Relias Meditations,
11-3. What if someone despises me? He says, let them see to it. But I will see to it
that I won't be found doing or saying anything contemptible. What if someone hates me? Let them see
to that. But I will see to it that I'm kind and good natured to it all and be prepared to show
even the hate or where they went wrong, not in a critical way or to show off my patience,
but genuinely and usefully.
So when I respond, I try to have fun with it.
And if it doesn't always come off as I'm having fun,
I assure you I am having fun.
Because I think that's, you know,
the stokes talk about you're gonna laugh,
you're gonna cry.
I think if you can't have fun with it,
if you can't troll the trolls back,
then in a sense they are winning.
But let's go to meditations 11, 18.
Kindness is invincible, but only when it's sincere, and with no hypocrisy or faking.
For what even can the most malicious person do if you keep showing kindness, and if given the
chance, you gently try to point out where they went wrong, right, as they were trying to harm you?
This is the hard part, and I talked about this
with Brad Stone and his book about Jeff Bezos.
Jeff Bezos heard very early on from his grandfather
that it's easier to be clever than kind.
And I would say this totally drives with my experience.
It's easy to have a witty comeback.
It's easy to be sarcastic.
It's easy to dunk on someone to point out the obvious
and ridiculous flaws or contradictions
in their argument or even to focus on the horrific implications of what they're saying and
point out the cost of their behavior, but kindness is almost certainly what is going to convince
someone, right? Patience is what it's going to take to convince them. And when you attack, you're almost certainly making them dig in more.
And I have to remind myself of this.
And then finally, we have epictetus in Coretian 20.
Keep in mind that it isn't the one who has it in for you and takes a swipe that harms
you, but rather the harm comes from your own belief about the abuse.
So when someone arouses your anger, note that it's really your own opinion that's fueling
it. Instead, make it your first response, not to be carried away by such impressions,
for with time and distance, self-mastery is more easily achieved.
The other thought I would add to this is, I've never put out a book and not seen some people react negatively, meanly, aggressively about, you know, this thing that I just spent
so much time and energy on.
And that's something you learn when you put out stuff into the world.
I talked about this with Malcolm Gladwell on the podcast.
The people who dislike what you do are almost always louder than the people who are like,
oh, it's pretty good.
I liked it, right?
Most of the things you like, you just sort of nod your head and move on,
but it's the things you really hate.
That's what seems to get us riled up
and that's what we seem to talk about most.
We can plan about most.
So anyone that puts anything out in the world
has to understand how to handle haters,
not to be triggered by them, not to be distracted by them,
not to be made bitter by them, not to be made worse by them.
I think you'll agree.
I hope you're not a hater.
I hope you can find some more courage in your life.
Talk soon. Hey, Prime Members, you can listen to the Daily Stoic Early and Add Free on Amazon Music,
download the Amazon Music app today, or you can listen early and add free with Wondery
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