The Daily Stoic - This Matters Way More Than The Details | Ask DS

Episode Date: November 2, 2023

There can be so much about the study of this philosophy that can be overwhelming that’s intimidating. When did Stoicism start? Where did it begin? What the hell is a Stoa Poikile?? Put asid...e that it focuses on some of the most pressing and complicated topics in the world–good, evil, our mortality–philosophy is also filled with paradoxes and counterintuitive arguments. More pressing and practical for many of us, philosophy is filled with unpronounceable names and big words, often from languages we don’t speak.Stoicism 101 is a 14 day guided journey through the best of Stoicism. What is Stoicism? Who were the Stoics? Why have some of history’s greatest leaders practiced Stoicism in their daily lives? How can I consistently apply Stoicism to my life?If you’re thinking any of those things, you’ve come to the right place. We set up Stoicism 101: Ancient Philosophy For Your Actual Life to give you the absolute best of Stoicism in 14 days, with Ryan Holiday as your personal teacher—all for just $25.Registration is only open until TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 7TH, so we hope you’ll take a moment and sign up now.✉️ 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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Starting point is 00:00:52 of $20 or more using the code daily stoic 20. Hey you, yeah you. I'm gonna let you in on a little secret. Jiffy is the fastest and easiest way to get jobs done around the house. Just hop on the Jiffy app, choose from the 40 plus services, and bam, you'll be matched with a reliable pro in seconds. Windows and eaves cleaning, check, yard cleanup, check. Plumbing, you guessed it, they've got it all. Plus, all jobs come with a satisfaction guarantee. Download the Jiffy app or sign up at jiffyondemand.com and don't forget to use the code first for $25 off your first job. Welcome to the Daily Stoic podcast where each day we read a passage of ancient wisdom designed
Starting point is 00:01:35 to help you in your everyday life. Well on Thursdays we not only read the daily meditation but we answer some questions from listeners and fellow Stoics. We're trying to apply this philosophy just as you are. Some of these come from my talks. Some of these come from Zoom sessions that we do with daily stoic life members or as part of the challenges. Some of them are from interactions I have on the street when there happen to be someone they're recording. But thank you for listening.
Starting point is 00:02:03 And we hope this is of use to you. In the unbearable lightness of being, Theresa, as the Prague Spring happens and the Soviets begin a military occupation, takes the time to rescue a crow that was hurt on the side of the road. Yet when dissidents come and ask Thomas, her husband, to sign a political petition, he refuses,
Starting point is 00:02:31 which prompts a rather interesting sentence in the book. It is much more important to dig a half-barried crow out of the ground that descend petitions to a president. A lot of people would reflexively disagree with that. Certainly the actions of most people do. Even though there is the saying that all politics are local, we tend to think big picture before we think little picture. Santa was the same way.
Starting point is 00:02:58 Look at how he expressed his priorities in the essay on leisure. The duty of a man is to be useful to his fellow men if possible, to be useful to many of them. Failing this, to be useful to a few, failing this, to be useful to his neighbors, and failing them, to be useful to himself. For when he helps others, he advances the general interests of mankind.
Starting point is 00:03:19 It's ironic, Sennaq's impact on trying to help as many of his fellow men as possible was what drove him into politics and eventually to Nero's court, where he probably hurt more than he helped. It was only after that failure that he retreated back to his writing into small-town life. But what if he'd switched that order? What if he'd focused on the suffering crow instead of petitioning the emperor? Might the world have been a better place.
Starting point is 00:03:46 These are unanswerable questions, but they raise a provocative point that goes to the core of stoic thought. We should get our own house in order first before we try to tackle other people's problems. We should deal with what's in front of us, with how we can help those in our neighborhood and our town before we try to change the world. Because if tragedy ever falls your family, cancer, unemployment, a debilitating accident, and untimely death, the world will not be there to take your kids to school so that you can make the doctor's appointment. The world is not who will leave casseroles on your doorstep or start a GoFundMe page. It will be your neighbors, your town, and you should do the same.
Starting point is 00:04:26 Doing those small things won't change the whole world, but they will change somebody's world, and that is what matters. Please check out the Daily Stoke Store where we sell products that we ourselves use that are designed to take these stoke lessons to the next level, just go to dailystoke.com slash store.
Starting point is 00:04:47 Hey, it's Ryan. Welcome to another Thursday episode of the Daily Stoic Podcast. I did a lot of virtual talks during the pandemic and, you know, companies were facing obstacles, difficulties, etc. And now it's cool. I'm starting to go see some of those same groups in person again and sort of reflect on, well, how did they respond to that adversity? What did become possible based on what they were going through?
Starting point is 00:05:25 And one of those groups, I gave a talk to Mutual of Omaha. I think I did two virtual talks in 2021, 22. And then I went out and saw them when they were doing an event here in Austin. Video that'll come out later. But I was talking to a bunch of financial advisors that had questions about applying stoke philosophy to what they do, both personally and professionally, and I'm excited to share some of those questions with you now. YouTube's a great one, I think it's worth pointing out.
Starting point is 00:05:55 Also, all this information, the skill of being able to separate good information from bad information, truth from bullshit, you know, like you can learn all sorts of stuff on YouTube, you can also get sucked down some pretty insane rabbit holes. I think we've got some people who have done that. And so these are like the people who can figure out how to get the good parts of the inventions or the technologies or the changes and not be corrupted by or distracted by the bad parts
Starting point is 00:06:23 is, you know, I think a very underrated skill. Yeah, and getting a couple of like good mentors and you know, offer solid stuff. So I think my original entry drug into you, let's Tim Ferriss, right? Following Tim Ferriss, to you, to you, to me, I'm the Jockego. I mean, I was early on Jockego.
Starting point is 00:06:39 The Jockego's first podcast with Tim Ferriss 200 years ago, bought the book. I mean, so following where does Ryan show the next? Well, I'm probably gonna know that that's a good person. I should be listening to and trust me in terms of, because there is a lot of crap out there, right? You look at our business and the amount of garbage out there on YouTube about our business
Starting point is 00:06:58 and financial independence, terrible. So you have to have the right voices, the right mentors. So, you know, get a list of the authors that you like and then go from there, because they're always on somebody else's podcast or YouTube channel. Bigger comments. Yeah. Kurt.
Starting point is 00:07:14 Hi. Hello. Thank you, Ryan, for coming here. I want to point out a couple things. Thank you, by the way, for providing the stillness of the key. Oh, my pleasure. That was a book that AJ turned me on. AJ has been my mentor to getting to the patch.
Starting point is 00:07:29 We have for several years, I get a little over the passionate about things. That's been an impactful book to me as well. How wonderful. So my question is more of a life question. So as leaders, we've trained ourselves, we've coached ourselves to detach emotionally to make decisions, to think more logically and work like, what are your thoughts when you get around your family, you have us, us or children or family members that need that emotion? Sure. We've shut it off all day long and they logical detach decisions, but then they crave that emotion from you so you're not robotic.
Starting point is 00:08:06 It's more of a life question. Yeah, I do think it's important that we don't see the Stoics as robots or as emotionless, because they weren't. You know, they were people who had jobs like all of us here, and they were in high-stakes, high-pressure situations, but they also had families. They also enjoyed going to the theater. They told Joker, there was a joke who died of laughter. Literally, there's a Wikipedia page of list
Starting point is 00:08:31 of unusual deaths. And he's like, the stoic precipice is at the top. He told some joke, he thought it was so funny. He didn't just die of a joke. He died laughing so hard at one of his own jokes, which may be a stoic argument against emotions, maybe I don't know. But the idea that the stoics were unfeeling, I think, when you actually look at the lives
Starting point is 00:08:51 of the stoics, what they did, what they cared about, the decisions you made, you see that they weren't these sort of detached, disconnected people. They tried to be disconnected and detached from, you know, as I said, fear or anger or frustration, especially when that made no difference to a situation, but as far as, you know, caring about other people, trying to, you know, connect with other people, I think this is, you know, this is, it's not where they're putting listosism aside, but it's by getting rid of the other stuff that you actually have room for that stuff that really matters, right? If you're spending your whole day in some state of rage or frustration or, you know,
Starting point is 00:09:36 you're bouncing between these different extremes, when you come home, you're going to be emotionally exhausted. You don't have time to understand, hey, this toddler is dealing with some stuff and I'm going to be, you know, a safe spot for that and I'm going to be able to help them through it because I'm not, you know, I'm not at the end of my rope. So I think it's really important that we see that in the more beautiful parts of the Stoic tradition, Seneca who goes through all sorts of adversity and difficulty in his life, he writes these three essays called consolations. And one is to the daughter of a friend who had died, the others to his mother when Senekuk gets exiled.
Starting point is 00:10:13 And I'm forgetting who the other one is for, but he's basically coaxing someone through extreme grief and sadness. And he's saying, you can't deceive it, you can't pretend that it doesn't exist, you can't just stuff it down. You're gonna have to process this and you're gonna you can't deceive it, you can't pretend that it doesn't exist, you can't just stuff it down. You're gonna have to process this and you're gonna have to deal with it.
Starting point is 00:10:28 And so I think it's important that the Stoics not only do that with themselves, but when other people are going through something, if someone else is emotional, just going, hey, you're being very emotional right now, this is not rational, you know, that's a good recipe for making them even more irrational. And having some patience and empathy and understanding
Starting point is 00:10:46 I think is is part of what we're talking about here too AJ, there's a lot of different tone Hi, I'm Andrew In the book, the obstacle of the way we discuss living My book is actually the trust of process and the section Living moment to moment, they like to paycheck to paycheck. I think a lot of people in this room might be taking back by that kind of right there.
Starting point is 00:11:10 Sure. Also, if you can maybe help bridge those two thoughts. Yeah, I don't mean literally spend all of your paychecks. But the point is, sometimes we're getting, what am I going to do 20 years from now? What am I going to do 10 years from now? What am I going to do 10 years from now? What about this? What about this?
Starting point is 00:11:27 And so this sort of, that creates this kind of anxiety, doom spiral that doesn't allow you to sort of make good decisions here in the moment. So I think it's attention, right? The Stoics talk about sort of meditating on the things that could happen. so you're prepared for them, you're not caught by surprise. And at the same time, to not be suffering in advance
Starting point is 00:11:52 because something may or may not happen down the road. So I think it's a balance. You're trying to balance that out. But I do think generally being present is better than, say say dwelling on the past or fearing the future and just go, hey, what's going on right now? What do I need to do right now? And then as far as, I often think from a financial standpoint, the more you automate things
Starting point is 00:12:21 as far as in the present, you're automating things. So it's recurring without you having to use in the moment willpower. That's one way to counterbalance that impulse to either be too conservative or too irresponsible. It's like, hey, based on the math, based on the information, what should I be doing? What's the right thing?
Starting point is 00:12:45 And how do I make that decision one time? And then it makes it on a recurring basis for me. I'm sure you guys talk to your clients about this all the time. Now that I'm right here under the right conditions with the right advice, what's the decision I can make? And how do I make it once? So I'm not in the moment sort of dwelling. What am I going to do when I'm retired?
Starting point is 00:13:01 When I retire every day, every moment of every day. That's not a good recipe for succeeding at work right now. With your, how long do you do a process? With my journal? So, with my journal, I try to just have a little conversation with myself about what I'm thinking and what I'm doing. I think so often we're just sort of unconsciously going through life. You know, we're upset by this, we're worried about that,
Starting point is 00:13:28 we're excited about this. And what I try to do on the pages is just create a little distance and try to spell it out. And then I go, is that actually true? Do I actually believe that? Is that who I want to be? And creating that practice allows me to, I think, be a bit more objective about
Starting point is 00:13:46 myself and get a little distance from it. That's kind of how I think about journaling. There's a daily stoic journal that I have that gives you like a sort of stoic themed prompt every day, once in the morning and once at night. So I use that. I also use a little journal that I have like a sort of a freeform journal where I just put down thoughts. And then I have another journal where I just write, it's got five lines, and you keep it for five years. It's called the One Line a Day Journal.
Starting point is 00:14:16 I'm actually having them in my bookstore. But it's One Line a Day. And you just write, I just write one thing about the day that just happened. And it gives me this really good, kind of, running log about where I was last year, and where I was the year before, and the year before, and it gives me a sense of kind of the rhythm to go,
Starting point is 00:14:31 oh, I was worried about this last year, and then it got handled. Oh, I was in the middle of my book on this day, 24 months ago, and now it's out. And in that moment, I probably, I was so afraid it wasn't going to happen. And that's why I trust the process, right? It's because, hey, I have documentation that I've been through this before, and it works
Starting point is 00:14:54 out. And so, just kind of having that, you know, ongoing dialogue with yourself is to me what journaling is about. It's not for publication, it's not for posterity, it's just for you to work out that stuff. And I really don't think there's a wrong way to do it. You can do it on your phone, do it in a document on your computer, you can do it on, you know, notepads in a hotel room. I don't, just whatever gets you doing it is, I think, the best way to do it. You got one here.
Starting point is 00:15:19 All right. So a lot of us are in kind of new positions, maybe on new teams or different capacities. I think it's gonna be really important for the step of the team. Sure. So you talked about that up from what's some of your advice on doing that? Well, first off, I would just say congratulations.
Starting point is 00:15:37 I think sometimes, and we work, we have this goal way off in the future, and we work really hard on it, and then it happens. And then we're in that position, right? And because we're now in the future and we work really hard on it and then it happens. And then we're in that position, right? And because we're now in the thick of that position, we don't really get to appreciate like how crazy we thought it would be, not that long ago, to ever be here. Like, we, you did it, you know what I mean?
Starting point is 00:15:57 So I would just congratulate yourself and soak that in for a second because I think celebrating wins is something often we're not good enough at. But as far as a routine goes, I think one of the things I've learned, I used to have a very specific routine, this is what I did every day, how it had to be, and then I had kids and now I don't have that routine anymore. Because they blow up stuff, right? And life blows up stuff.
Starting point is 00:16:21 And so one of the things I try to get better at is having routines plural. I have a routine that I do when I travel, when I have in some ways more control over what I'm doing, but also less control, because I'm not at my house, not with my stuff. It's a different time zone. I have sort of the routine I do when the kids wake up
Starting point is 00:16:40 when they're supposed to, and I have the routine when we're scrambling last minute and they don't. You know what I mean? I have, I think about it more like, what are the important practices that I should try to do every day that ground me, that allow me to do what I do?
Starting point is 00:16:56 And then what's the best order for them to go in? But to have a little flexibility or, let's just say not rigidity because life is unpredictable. And if you're someone who it has to be this way, at this time, well, what happens when your plane is delayed or what happens when somebody wakes up sick or what happens when you check traffic
Starting point is 00:17:20 and it's going to take you an extra hour to get there. And so I think the ability to have a broad sense of what are the best practices, how do you do them, what order should they come in. But at the same time being a bit flexible is maybe a better way to think about it. But when are you at your best and build around that? When are you at your best?
Starting point is 00:17:43 What's the most important thing for you to do? What are the things that only you can do? And I try to build my routines or my day around that. So I'm not putting the important thing off, like one of my rules is do the important stuff first, or do the hard stuff first. I tackle it early, if I have accomplished that, the rest of the day is kind of extra.
Starting point is 00:18:04 But if I get tied up in a lot of trivial, you know, inconsequential stuff early, and then something intervenes in the afternoon, well now all I have to show for that day is like this paper work that I did. So do you have a list of books that are, I mean, I know you have a monthly read list of you. The other side up for his news letter, the process is so good books, it's good probably you do that to a little promotion for you, but do you have someone who said, hey, what's the top three books, top five books
Starting point is 00:18:34 that have impacted me most in my life? What would you tell them or could you boil it out in a crowd? I don't know if I could boil it down to that. I mean, one of the reasons I opened my own bookstore and one of the perks of opening my own bookstore is that I only carry books that I like. I don't carry what's new, I don't carry if I could boil it down to that. I mean, one of the reasons I opened my own bookstore and one of the perks of opening my own bookstore is that I only carry books that I like. I don't carry what's new and I don't carry what's popular.
Starting point is 00:18:50 It's only books that I like, which maybe isn't the best business decision, but it allows me to go, like, just come, and I promise you one of these books will be good. Or all of them will be good, because I've personally read them. But as far as a couple of favorites just off the top of my head, I would think Marx realizes meditation is one of the most incredible books on leadership I've ever read.
Starting point is 00:19:10 I very much was influenced by and continued to recommend Robert Green's works. So the 40 laws of power, the laws of human nature, sometimes people go, oh, isn't that book sort of evil? Or I'm not interested in power. I usually go, that's exactly who should read this book, because you're wanting to be the world, you're wanting the world to be different than it is.
Starting point is 00:19:33 And there might be a little bit in naivete or wishful thing in there. It doesn't, it's not saying you have to be very Machiavellian. It's saying that you have to understand the Machiavellian tendencies of human beings and organizations. You have to understand how these things work. And then another book that I really like
Starting point is 00:19:49 is Doris Kern's Goodwin, the biographer. She has a book called Leadership, Interbulent Times. And it's sort of a, she's obviously been a master biographer for many, many decades. But this is sort of a greatest hits album of the people she wrote about, which is Theodore Roosevelt, Lincoln, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, and Lyndon Johnson. But it's the moments of turmoil and crisis
Starting point is 00:20:17 and difficulty of their life and their story. And so I think leadership when things are going great is easy. You want to study what the leaders did in moments of crisis and difficulty because that's most likely where you're going to need to lean on them. So that's a book I'd also recommend. So you want a bookstore?
Starting point is 00:20:34 Do you also have a library at your house? Well, one of the trades I made with my wife was that I would move all the books out of our house into the office. So it wouldn't look like we were hoarders. But yes, of course, I have many, many, many, many books and I only try to read the physical ones and I try to keep them and I'm trying to create a library in the sense of I want to go back and reread those books and I want to see what struck me in the past. But I also want to have them as
Starting point is 00:21:04 a resource. Hey, I didn't so-and-so talk about this in one of those, I want to go back to it, and I want to find it. And I want to have my sort of notes or my thoughts there. So yeah, I'm always sort of not just reading, but accumulating, and sorting, and organizing information in ways that it's accessible and usable. 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 Plus in Apple Podcasts. Hey, it's Guy Ross here, the host of How I Built This.
Starting point is 00:21:59 It's a podcast that gives you a front row seat to how the greatest businesses were built, and the innovators, entrepreneurs, and idealists behind them. Every week I speak to someone new, like Max Levchin, a computer genius who built PayPal into a successful business against all odds, with future visionaries like Elon Musk and Peter Teal, or Emmett Sheer, a gamer who turned a 24-7 live stream of his friend into the billion dollar gaming platform Twitch. And all of these great conversations can help you learn how to think big and take risks and navigate crises in life and work from people who've done all of that and more. Follow how I built this on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts.
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