The Daily Stoic - We Are All Replaceable | This Stoic Virtue Will Change Your Life
Episode Date: February 28, 2023The Stoics believed in the concept of "amor fati," or "love of fate." This means accepting and embracing everything that happens, including the fact that we are all replaceable.As Marcus Aure...lius wrote, "All things are ephemeral – fame and the famous as well." No matter how great or important we may feel in the moment, time marches on and eventually someone else will fill our place.But this shouldn't be seen as a negative.---Today, Ryan presents highlights of his discussions with top performers in their fields about how practicing the Stoic virtue of discipline has shaped their lives for the better.✉️ 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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Hi, I'm David Brown, the host of Wundery's podcast business wars.
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music or wherever you get your podcasts. Welcome to the Daily Stoic Podcast, where each day we read a passage of ancient wisdom designed
to help you in your everyday life.
On Tuesdays, we take a closer look at these stoic ideas, how we can apply them in our actual
lives.
Thanks for listening, and I hope you enjoy. We are all replaceable.
The stokes believed in the concept of a more faati or a love of fate.
This means accepting and embracing everything that happens,
including the fact that we're all replaceable.
As Marcus really wrote,
all things are ephemeral, fame and the famous as well.
No matter how
great or important we may feel in the
moment, time marches on and eventually
someone else will fill our place. But this
shouldn't be seen as negative. In fact, it can
be a liberating realization. If we
understand that our time is limited and we
will eventually be replaced, it freezes
from the pressure to be perfect or to
constantly prove ourselves.
Instead, we can focus on making the most of the time
we have and doing our best in the present moment.
We can work hard, be kind, and leave a positive impact
on the world, knowing that someone else
will eventually continue the work we started.
The Stokes taught that we should strive for Udheim and Aya,
or a sense of fulfillment and contentment.
By focusing on our own growth and development
rather than trying to secure our place in the world,
we can find true peace and happiness.
So embrace the fact that you're replaceable
and use that realization to live your best life.
It makes sense, right?
But there might be part of that podcast that you just heard that sounded a little off.
And that's because it was actually written by a computer with artificial intelligence,
who was prompted to write on the subject of replaceability while mimicking the style of the daily
stoic. It struck me that something like Chat GBT, the wildly popular new AI engine, is a good example
of the idea that life is changing and that none of us are truly indispensable.
Even me, suddenly a computer can do what I can do, what a human can do, what the Stoics
were doing with their own writing for centuries.
It's scary and it's unreal, but it's also a reality,
not something to run from or deny, but to examine, to figure out, to work with and not
against as we must do with all change, technological, cultural, and environmental that life brings us.
Discipline is what takes you to that higher level. You can't wish your way there, you can't chant your way there. The only way you get there is through hard work.
That's the question my coach keeps asking me, do you want to be fast now or do you want
to be fast at the next World Cup? It's an interesting balance between being future thinking
and looking at the process and understanding
where you're going and trusting that you're going somewhere,
but also being OK with where you are right now.
And that doesn't mean this is going
to be the moment forever, but you have to honor that break
and that rest and what regeneration happens in your body
to be able to actually deliver when you need to be fast.
The interesting thing about being a professional athlete
is we do have these goals. And we have cycles and we have training structure for the entire year
and the goals to really peak. So we're trying to have kind of like superhuman performance for a few
big events a year and a lot of people think that means that you're just training as hard as you can
all the time. But really I would say what differentiates amateur and elite athletes primarily is the recovery time,
the ability to make that work count
and to allow your body to recover
between these hard sessions.
So a lot of what we do in the fall
is long, easy rides and just preparing your body
to be able to take on this load.
And it might feel like you're not doing all that you can,
but it's critical to performance when
the time comes. It really sounds like what you're talking about. Here's Temperance, the idea of
moderation, which I imagine is extra difficult when you are super committed, super ambitious. I
imagine it sucks to not be peaking right now because that means you're having to be okay with not
being as good as you'd like to be in the present moment, or even for extended periods of time.
Yeah, optimizing versus maximizing,
understanding what things you're doing
that make a big difference,
and doing those things fully and completely,
but not maximizing.
I think for me, like, running
or the physical training that I do,
part of that is creating the muscle
that allows me to go like, I didn't want to go for a run this morning and I do. Part of that is creating the muscle that allows me to go like,
I didn't want to go for a run this morning and I went. I also don't want to take notes on this
boring-ass book that I read, but like, I'm the kind of person that easily and regularly does
the things I don't want to do, not just if they're hard, but because they're hard.
I think it's absolutely a muscle that we have.
It's a mental muscle.
And I think the research backs us up.
If we can train that discipline, that self-control, that ability to sit with that heart
thing and navigate it, it helps in other aspects of our life.
So in my life, a lot of it is around physical practice.
When I was growing up, I was very competitive runner and I don't push it that much anymore.
But what I make sure that I do is that in addition to,
let's say, my easy running,
at least once a week, I'm doing something
where I'm pushing the bounds of my physical ability.
That could be going to a nearby hill
and doing some sprints up and down it.
It could be like, you know, I'm gonna go out
four miles and then turn around and try and run the last four miles like hard home. And I do that,
not because I'm trying to race. I don't race anymore or get in good shape. It's just because I want
to be able to sit with that like situation where part of my mind is screaming at me to say, hey,
like you're not training for anything. Like why don't you just slow down, why don't you quit,
you don't have to do this.
Whenever I feel that like anxiety or that fear or that pull,
that acts as a signal to me to sit there and be like,
all right, maybe I should move towards this for a little bit.
Why I'm in this sport and why I keep signing up for
these really, really long races is that I wanna see what's possible.
If we just keep chipping away at it,
like I call it my pain cave
and I'm trying to make it bigger.
So I'm hoping that this ceiling or back of my cave
can be made bigger if I just keep on going into it
and trying to do something a little bit harder or push a little farther
than I've ever gone before.
And how do you know when you're in the cave?
When you reach that feeling of like it's impossible
to go another step, like I'm not sure
how I'll keep moving forward.
That's when I know I'm like really back
in the back corners of the cave.
So the vast majority or a big chunk of a race,
you haven't gotten to the cave yet.
The cave is where you get when you start to butt up
against your limits.
The first 50 reps don't matter,
it's the 51st rep that it's where the muscle is being made.
Is that sort of how it is?
Kind of, but I would say in these ruminum races,
sometimes you're shocked by a very early cave appearance, like
just whatever happens with the day or the train. For some reason, you might hit the cave
much, much sooner. Then I don't think that necessarily means you shy away from going
in. I think that's when you dive in and keep working the cave in different spots.
You know, maybe it's not the distance part of your cave where you're seeing what's possible
for a new distance, but maybe it's like the effort or how efficiently you could be pushing up
this mountain. And I'm really visual, so when it gets to be that state, when I'm running,
I'll actually picture the cave holding like a chisel
and a hard hat and just like getting to work
on making it bigger.
So the season ends, you get a couple months off
or whatever and then you're starting to gear up
for the next season.
What was your feeling about that?
Were you excited for a new season to start
or was there sort of a dread for you that you knew
it was gonna be very hard and it would be grueling?
You can have both feelings.
Yeah, it's kind of like better sweet.
You know what's common, you know what you just went through,
the strain it put on your body, mentally, physically,
spiritually, your family, it's very, very stressful.
Football people always ask me, they're like,
man, do you miss it?
And I'm like, hell no.
Right.
But then part of me goes, hell yeah.
It's like graduating from high school.
I don't miss getting my ass kicked.
The fight, the monotony of going every single day,
it becomes so boring.
But football is a fight.
It's not fun.
The games are fun, but it's not fun.
When you're going into your office,
obviously you try to focus on the good.
That's the way I did it.
I remember the good times, the positive stuff that I did.
And then you take some time off where I didn't do anything for that first month. You know what, I
wouldn't even touch a football. Really? That was the beauty of basketball for me. Basketball was my
saving grace because I would just go play basketball because I really, really enjoy it. So you could
stay in shape, stay in shape. And I played every single day and I played competitive. I played
shoot. I even tried out for the Miami Heat one off season, but I play in the summer pro leagues
out there with Magic Johnson, Bo Outlaw,
I've never had Antoine Jamison like Paul Pierce,
like all these pro leagues, but that would be a way
for me to take my mind off of football.
And then once the summer came, I started gearing up into it.
And you started slowly but surely getting my mind wrapped
around what I want to do, set some new goals, keep building
off of what I did before.
You're never satisfied.
I think that's how you become truly, truly great.
I never rested and said, oh my God,
I was first team all pro last year.
It's like, no, I gotta get even better.
I had a thousand yards.
I need 1200 yards.
It's like, I need to keep pushing myself.
You and I are very disciplined guys.
If anybody watched us get up in the morning,
they would say, wow, which I could do that.
But they also might say they're crazy to be,
you know, lashing themselves like they are.
I believe that life operates on two levels, and the higher level is the muse level.
The level we were just talking about that the shaman saw, the level of your calling of your work, whatever that is.
And the lower level is our material plane. And on that lower level is the force that I call resistance with a capital R. That's there to stop us from
reaching this higher level. And if we don't reach this level, we don't do our work, we
don't follow our calling, then we get sick and we do bad things and shit happens, right?
So what is the purpose of discipline? Discipline is what takes you to that higher level.
That's right. That's why you have to have it. You can't wish your way there. You can't chant your way there.
You can't, whatever was that book of the secret,
you can't vibe your way there.
Yeah, the law of attraction is not going to get it's bullshit.
The only way you get there is through hard work.
The beings that inhabit this higher level,
the way you want to associate with,
that's the only thing they respect.
You know, you've got to punch your ticket and pay the price.
So discipline is not a bad thing. with that's the only thing they respect. You know, you've got to punch your ticket and pay the price.
So discipline is not a bad thing.
You're not crazy to be self-discipline
because that's what gets you to this higher level.
And also gets you to just live your life
so that when the day is over, you're calm.
You're not freaking out as some of us have in the past.
That's beautiful. I love it.
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