The Daily Stoic - We Are Not Alone | Accepting What Is
Episode Date: October 31, 2022Ghosts are, of course, a silly thing to believe in (Athenodorus’ ghost story notwithstanding). Yet the Stoics would not have scoffed at Eleanor Roosevelt’s feeling of not being alone in t...he Lincoln bedroom. As the New York Times would write many years ago in an editorial about her claim, “The White House is built of memories…It will remain a haunted house as long as it stands, but only in the benign sense that unseen presences may still be watching the destiny of the Republic…What American, passing by that great pillared residence, in time of stress, could fail to feel reassured to sense the shadowy figure of Lincoln, just as Mrs. Roosevelt describes him, gazing thoughtfully from a window?”✉️ 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 Facebook See 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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Welcome to the Daily Stoke Podcast.
Each day we bring you a meditation inspired by the ancient Stokes illustrated with stories
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We are not alone.
Ghosts are, of course, a silly thing to believe in.
Athena Doris is ghost story, non-withstanding.
Yet the Stokes would not have scoffed at Eleanor Roosevelt's feeling of not being alone in
the Lincoln bedroom.
As the New York Times would write many years ago in an editorial about her claim, the White House is built of memories.
It will remain a haunted house as long as it stands, but only in the benign sense that
the unseen presences may still be watching the destiny of the Republic.
What American passing by that great pillard residence in times of stress could fail
to feel reassured to sense the shadowy figure of Lincoln
just as Miss Roosevelt describes gazing thoughtfully from a window. And so the same feeling goes walking
past the old stoepokile or the colosseum or picking up a yellowed and crumbling edition of meditations.
You feel not just the presence of the Stoics themselves, but all the people
who have followed since. The parade of people, as Marcus really has himself wrote, doing just what
human beings have always done, people just like you, people with the same vices and virtues as you
teaching you, advising you, cautioning you with their example. Whether spirits exist or not, none of us are alone. Lincoln gazes
out his thoughtfully. Seneca keeps a light on for us at night, beckoning us to sit down
and reflect on our day. Cato's statue or lack thereof, as we have discussed, stands as an example
to follow. The private thoughts and admonitions of Marcus are there to reassure us, guiding
us towards our destiny.
This is not a scary thing, it's not a haunting thing.
It is as we talked about over at Daily Dad, which I hope you can sign up for, just listen to the podcast, the Daily Dad podcast.
This is the role that ancestors are supposed to play.
They inspire us, they protect us, they reassure us, they give us company.
We are not alone and never will be.
Remember that.
Act accordingly.
Accepting what is.
And this is from this week's entry in the Daily Stoic Journal,
366 days of writing and reflection on the art of living,
by yours truly and my co-writer and translator, Stephen Hanselman. I actually do this journal every
single day. There's a question in the morning, a question in the afternoon, and there's these
sort of weekly meditations. As Epictetus says, every day and night, we keep thoughts like this at
hand, write them, read them aloud, and talk to yourself, and others about them. You can check out the Daily Stoke Journal, anywhere books are sold,
you can also get a signed personalized copy for me in the Daily Stoke store at store.dailystoke.com.
Reinhold Mibers Serenity Prayer is a mantra for many. God grant me the serenity to accept the things I
cannot change, it reads, courage to change the things I can and the wisdom
to know the difference. The Stoics wanted to push past simply accepting what is. They wanted us to be
grateful and happy with what is. Epic Titus taught that we get a well-flowing life when we wish for
what is going to happen, not for what we want to happen.
And Marcus Aurelius adds that we should meet anything that comes our way with gratitude.
Not I wish this was different and I'll tolerate it, but I'm glad it happened this way.
It's for the best.
So let us try that on for size this week.
I may have two quotes from Epic Titus and one from Marcus Aurelius.
Don't seek for everything
to happen as you wish it would, but rather wish that everything happens as it actually
will.
And then your life will flow well.
That's Epic Titus' Incaridian 8, and then from the discourses 112, he says, to be truly
educated means this, learning to wish that each thing happens exactly as it
does.
Marcus Realius' Meditation 9.6, all you need are these certainty of judgment in the present
moment, action for the common good in the present moment, and an attitude of gratitude
in the present moment for anything that comes your way.
One thing I wanted to point out because I was fascinated to learn this, is the serenity
prayer of one, it sounds like some sort of real hymn or prayer that must go back thousands.
If yours, it honestly, it sounds like something that could come from the Stoics.
And then obviously a lot of people associated with recovery movement,
which it has become a big part of. But it really dates to like the 30s and 40s. They think
that he composed the prayer somewhere around the time of 1932, 1933, which for some context is,
you know, in the midst of the Great Depression. But again, one of the benefits
of wisdom is that it is both timely and timeless at the same time. So this idea of the prayer,
father, give us courage to change what must be altered, serendity to accept what cannot
be helped, and the insight to know one from another. Also, I think the difference between that
as he first writes it and then what it sort of commonly
gets rendered at is also a sign of,
as Twins says, the difference between lightning
and a lightning bug.
Like just the perfect wording of it,
the perfect encapsulation of the wisdom,
it feels as soon as you see it, even though, you know,
it's as old as some people's grandparents who are listening
to this, or perhaps some people who are listening to this themselves, they may be well older
than that short little prayer, but it feels as current and fresh and also as ageless and
timeless.
It's just about anything.
But anyways, let's not nerd out too much on the history of the
prayer. What I thought I would focus on today, because we've been talking about acceptance quite a
lot here on the podcast, I tend to disagree a little bit with epictetus. I find that epictetus's
life was so tragic and painful. I mean, he's born his name literally means like enslaved. We know almost nothing
about his family. We know nothing about his existence except that he's born a slave. He
has a cruel master who tortures him. He walks for a limp the rest of his life. And then after
30 years of slavery and eventually getting his freedom, epithetists is exiled by a cruel emperor. So it is a hard life. But
I find it striking that nowhere in epithetists' writings, does he really question whether
any of it was right or fair, whether anything could be done about it? Now you might say this is
him reaching this sort of sage-like level of wisdom. And I think there's truth to that. I'm in
whom I'd question, obviously, such a great and brave and enduring spirit. But I guess, obviously,
we live in a world now where people have more agency. And why do we have that agency? Because people
were willing to fight for it and change. So obviously, the Stos are mostly right. That so much of what happens in
this world is outside of our control. We should accept it, resenting it, crying over it,
whining about it, simply wishing it was otherwise, does not do anything. And then a lot of the things
that there, I think this is referred to are things that you just look, you were born five with three
instead of six with three. That's just a reality you're going to have to accept it, right?
People in your family go bald, you're going to have to accept it, right?
Your spouse turned out to be a jerk.
They ran away with all your money.
Left you, broke your heart.
It happened, right?
That is true.
But I just don't want epictetus to be misinterpreted as some sort of rationalization or acceptance of profound injustices,
including the injustices that Epictetus seemed relatively okay accepting, right?
As they say, progress depends on the unreasonable man.
I talk about this a little bit in the courage book.
We have to be accepting with the face, unflinchingly, the reality of our situation, but even as I read this paragraph that I have written, I would push back on
it a little bit and I do think it's important that we focus on what we're
going to do about the situations that we find ourselves in.
And I feel like epitititus could have done that a bit more himself.
Still obviously a great man, better man than I.
Certainly I could not have endured what he endured.
But it's just a thought today.
And I want you to be okay pushing back
and questioning things from the Stokes as well.
They weren't perfect.
They were products of their time.
They were products of their own experiences.
And we can challenge and debate and argue with them
as long as we think we're getting them closer
to what they actually mean
with the wisdom of the Stokes actually mean.
And that's today's message.
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