The Daily Stoic - Why Are You Going Through Life This Way? | Just Say No To Future Misery
Episode Date: August 19, 2025A pause creates space. A pause creates clarity. A pause can change everything.🪙 Carry The Daily Stoic Pause & Reflect Medallion as a reminder to stop and take a breathe. | Grab The Dai...ly Stoic Pause & Reflect Medallion at dailystoic.com/pause📓 Pick up a signed edition of The Daily Stoic Journal: 366 Days of Writing and Reflection on The Art of Living: https://store.dailystoic.com/📖 Preorder the final book in Ryan Holiday's The Stoic Virtues Series: "Wisdom Takes Work": https://store.dailystoic.com/pages/wisdom-takes-work🎙️ 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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Welcome to the Daily Stoic Podcast, where each day we bring you a stoic-inspired meditation
designed to help you find strength and insight and wisdom into everyday life.
Each one of these episodes is based on the 2,000-year-old philosophy that has guided some of
history's greatest men and women help you learn from them.
to follow in their example, and to start your day off with a little dose of courage and discipline
and justice and wisdom. For more, visitdailystoic.com.
must be exhausting. It cannot be fun. It's definitely not working well for you. Being this sensitive,
being this easy to provoke, picking these fights, getting sucked into these tense disagreements.
Think of the peace it's cost you. Think of the relationships it's worn out. Think of the opportunities
you've lost. All because you get caught up in the moment. All because you react without thinking.
all because you failed to look at this, whether it was some minor slight or some real injustice
in the calm light of mild philosophy. A good life, an effective life, a meaningful life is not
possible without cultivating the ability to pause and reflect, to resist being offended
or baited, to put up with differing opinions, to accept what's not in your control, to be able to
focus on the opportunity and not just the obstacle that has appeared. To remember, as Marcus Aurelius
writes in meditations, that the consequences of giving into our emotions are almost always
more harmful than the circumstances that aroused them in us. This is why the Stoics thought that
pausing was not a weakness, but wisdom. They knew that even a small delay could mean the difference
between regret and the right decision. We have a new coin for Daily Stoic that I just absolutely
adore. It's been a great reminder for me. It says pause it at reflecta on the front. We're
calling it the pause and reflect medallia. It's a reminder to stop and to breathe to think
before you act because that moment of reflection can save you from a lifetime of I wish they hadn't
or just from having to say, I'm sorry later, it's a tool to help you when your emotions run hot.
There's a mirror on the front.
Seneca says, you know, you should look yourself in the mirror when you're caught up in the sway of anger.
And on the back of the coin, there's the letters of the alphabet, some advice from the stoic Athenae Doraes to a young Octavian.
He told them to not do anything before he's counted all the letters of the alphabet.
of the alphabet. We made it with the same mint we've been making all our Daily Stoic coins with.
We've been making stuff in the U.S. since 1882, right? Even just thinking of that timeline helps
you calm down and see things with a little bit of perspective. I'm really proud of this one.
It's become one of my daily carries. And you can grab it at DailyStock.com slash pause.
I'll link to it in today's show notes. And yeah, just remember. Stop doing this to yourself.
Stop doing it to other people. Pause and reflect.
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Just say no to future misery. How often we make ourselves miserable in advance.
Out of fear of this, out of desperate hope for that.
When we focus on pining for avoiding a certain future,
we make ourselves miserable here in the present.
Hakato of Rhodes, a great student of the Middle Stoic scholar Panaitius,
taught that this misery is always tied to hopes and fears that we have of imagined future outcomes.
And so from this, Seneca reminds us to say no to both,
because indulging in hope or fear robs us of the ability to enjoy the present.
So today, try not to think so much about the future, what you hope will happen, what you fear might,
and just focus on right now, be where you are with what you're doing, what you're thinking
right now. And this is from this week's entry in the Daily Stoic Journal, 365 days of writing
and reflection on the art of living by yours truly Ryan Holiday. You can pick this up anywhere
books are sold. I use this journal myself every single day. And you can also pick up a signed
copy at store.dailystoic.com. It's ruinous for the soul to be anxious about the future and
miserable in advance of misery, Seneca writes in moral letters, engulfed by anxiety that the things
it desires might remain its own until the very end. For such a soul will never be at rest.
By longing for things to come, it will lose the ability to enjoy present things.
Then Seneca, again, there is no reason to live and no limit to our miseries if we let our fears
predominate. And then, going back to the original quote, Seneca in moral letter says,
Hakato says, cease to hope and you will cease to fear.
The primary cause of both these ills is that instead of adapting ourselves to the present
circumstances, we send out our thoughts too far ahead.
You know, it's funny in my podcast interview with Oliver Berkman.
He quoted something that he said is a real British expression, but I had actually heard of
in Ted Lassow, the idea that it's the hope that kills you.
Which, it's not that the Stoics are nihilists who, you know, don't hope.
try to get to a place of indifference where they're just like, whatever it will be will be,
I'm going to be good with it. This is also a theme that came up in my interview with Dr. Edith
Edgar, who wrote The Choice, which was about her experience in the Holocaust, and she talks about
how there was a person she knew in the camps who thought they would get out, be freed by a certain
date. And then the woman died on that day of despair, of disappointment. And Admiral Stockdale
talks about this, that it was the optimists who got crushed, right? Because they said,
oh, in March, oh in June, oh, by Christmas. But this was not something in their control. And so
in a way, hope is the same as fear. It's to hand over your happiness, your contentment,
your ability to continue on to some arbitrary thing or event or person or intervention in the
future, which is not up to you. I've been trying to think about that. I'm going to adjust to what
is. I'm going to accept it unflinchingly in the sense that it simply is. I'm going to adapt to
it. I'm going to adjust to it. I'm going to make the most of it. I'm going to be here now. I'm not going to
rob myself of the present, right? The person who needs it to be a certain way or needs it to not be
that way, and that's why they're afraid. Seneca's right. That soul will never be at rest. And by longing for
things or by fearing things, we lose the ability to enjoy present things. I thought this little phrase
particularly good one, and I think it's worth repeating again, where he says, to be miserable
in advance of misery, that's what fear is, right? Hope is just the opposite of that. It's just being
delusional in anticipation of an event outside your control, which often will be misery. So just try to
put fear or hope aside. Just try to be. Be here with this, whatever it is, wherever you are,
that's a plane ride you have today, whether that's traffic you're stuck in, whether it's a job
you have a couple more months left in, or maybe it's battling an illness or a blown out knee.
Just is. Don't magically hope it's going to get better. Don't fear it getting worse. Just be with it
now. Focus on what you can do now. Enjoy present things as best you can. Be indifferent, as the
Stoics say, which is to say good with any of the possibilities.
Because you are good. You are capable. That's the Stoic prescription for you this week. Say no to future
misery. It's not worth it. I'll talk to you soon.
Hey, it's Ryan. Thank you for listening to the Daily Stoic Podcast. I just wanted to say we so appreciate it.
We love serving you. It's amazing to us that over 30 million people have downloaded these episodes
in the couple years we've been doing it. It's an honor. Please spread
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