The Daily Stoic - You Can Do Something About This | Train To Let Go Of What’s Not Yours
Episode Date: November 24, 2023Marcus Aurelius would have recognized the feeling you feel right now. So would Seneca and Cato and many of the other Stoics. The Romans, like Americans, loved a good feast. They loved wine. T...hey loved breaking bread with family.We know this because their writings abound with descriptions of overflowing tables and dinners that went long into the night. But you know what doesn’t appear in their writings very often, just as it does not occur to us often enough?How some people don’t know this feeling at all.✉️ 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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I told this story before, but the first Airbnb I stayed in was 15 years ago.
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Welcome to the DailyStoic Podcasts. On Friday, we do double-duty not just reading our
daily meditation, but also reading a passage from the Daily Stoic, my book, 366 Meditations on Wisdom, Perseverance in the Heart of
Living, which I wrote with my wonderful collaborator, translator, and literary
agent, Stephen Hanselman. So today, it will give you a quick meditation from the
Stoics with some analysis from me, and then we'll send you out into the world to
turn these words into works.
You can do something about this.
Marcus Aurelius would have recognized the feeling that you feel right now.
So would Seneca and Kato and many of the other stoics.
The Romans like Americans love to good feast.
They love wine.
They love breaking bread with family.
We know this because their writings abound
with descriptions of overflowing tables
and dinners that went long into the night.
But you know what doesn't appear
in their writings very often?
Just as it doesn't occur often enough to us.
How some people don't know this feeling at all.
In fact, they are more familiar with
the opposite of it, hunger. While some of us sit here with the Thanksgiving hangover, they're
feeling the rumblings of an empty stomach. You're wondering if you'll ever eat again, and
they are in a very different way, thinking the same thing. Nearly one in eight households in
the United States is experiencing food insecurity, and more than 13 million children aren't getting enough food to eat.
More than 780 million people globally go to bed on an empty stomach.
And you might be thinking, so what?
Stoicism is about focusing on what's in my control.
Why shouldn't I let some slow-moving humanitarian crisis kill my sleepy trip to fan-five?
Well because, as Mark's really wrote,
those suffering humans are us and we are them
to allow harm to come to them through indifference
and through callousness is to allow harm to come to ourselves.
It's why the most magnificent moment of Marcus's reign
was the day he decided to sell off the palace furnishings
to keep Rome going, to help those in need.
Hierocles was a Roman stoic who spoke of circles of concern.
Our first concern, he said, is to our mind, but beyond this is our concern for our bodies,
for our immediate family, then our extended family.
Like concentric rings, these circles were followed by our concern for our community, for
our city, for our country, our empire, our world.
The work of philosophy, he he said was to draw this outer
concern inward, to learn how to care as much as possible for as many people as possible,
to do as much good for them as possible. The Stoics said, we have to have this affinity for our
fellow human beings and that this is our obligation, our duty, they said, it's to help them,
to serve them, to illustrate those virtues of courage and justice
toward and for and through them. So today, on a day when people will be lining up to get a deal on
a flat screen television or gorging on leftovers while they post photos on social media, let us
instead put our energy towards helping the less fortunate. We don't control a lot in this world,
but we can keep people from going hungry. We can alleviate someone's fear or worry. We can put food on their table.
And better yet, we can do this together. Daily Stoke for now, the fourth year is raising
money for feeding America. We've donated the first $30,000 and we'd like your help in getting
to our goal of 300,000, which would provide three million meals for families across the country.
Together, we can make this small debt in a big problem. We can't alleviate everyone's suffering
or struggle, but for the people we can help the difference is huge. So let's do it. Let's be
good still, X. Today, together, I'm putting my money or my mouth is, and I'm just asking you to
put in a dollar, two dollars, three dollars, whatever, just a little bit. Each dollar you put in
raises enough money to feed 10 people or provide 102, $3, whatever, just a little bit. Each dollar you put in raises enough money
to feed 10 people or provide 10 meals, which is awesome.
So just go to dailystilic.com slash feeding
to make your donation and I'll link to it in today's show notes.
I'd love to see this number get super high folks
and I'll feel great together.
Train to let go of what's not yours. This is the November 24th entry in the Daily Stoic. We've got a nice big passage from Epic Titus' discourses today.
Whenever you experience the pangs of losing something, don't treat it like a part
of yourself, but as a breakable glass. So when it falls, you will
remember that and won't be troubled. So too, whenever you kiss your child or sibling or friend,
don't layer on top of that, the experience of all the things you might wish, but hold them back
and stop them, just as those who might ride behind triumphant generals remind them that they are
mortal. In the same way, remind yourself that your precious one isn't one of your possessions,
just something given for now, but not forever.
That's epic to this is discourses 324.
As it happens actually at a Roman triumph, the majority of the public would have their eyes
glued to the victorious general at the front, one of the most coveted spots during Roman
times.
Only if you would notice the aid in the back, right behind the commander,
whispering into his ear,
remember thou art mortal.
What a reminder to hear at the peak of glory and victory.
In our own lives, we can train to be that whisper.
When there is something we prize or something that we love,
we can whisper to ourselves that it is fragile and mortal
and not truly ours.
No matter how strong or invincible something feels, it never is.
We must remind ourselves that it can break, can die, can leave us.
Loss is one of our deepest fears.
Ignorance and pretending don't make things better or stronger.
They just mean the loss will be all the more jarring when it occurs. There's
a zen story about a guy who has a beautiful cup, and he says to himself over and over
and over again, the cup is already broken, the cup is already broken, the cup is already
broken. And then of course, when it does break, he's not surprised. I think this is what
Epitides is saying on a couple of levels, one is just reminding yourself that when you're triumphant, when you're successful, when
you're at the top of the world, it never lasts.
Sena Ka being a profound example of this top of the world, exiled, top of the world, exiled,
top of the world, executed.
This is how it goes.
It doesn't last.
It never does.
You run the bestseller lists, in my case, eventually it comes to an end. Your time in the NFL
comes to an end. Your time selling real estate in the bull market, it comes to an end. It always does.
Your youth comes to an end, right? All things come to an end. And so realizing that this is just
this thing given to you for now, and you should enjoy it and be present for it and appreciate it,
never lose sight of the fact that it is already broken.
It is already gone.
It's already in the process of leaving or falling apart.
Entropy is working on it in this very moment.
Now, the next part of this, the harder part, it's realizing that this isn't
just true for status or accomplishment or momentum or whatever,
possessions, but also for people
Professor Scott Galoway told me this and I've written about it before but he was talking about how
You're constantly losing your kids, right?
They're a four-year-old for one day and then they're four-year-olds and one day right there
They're they as they are getting older, you are losing who they were, right?
They were a baby for so long, a toddler for so long, a preteen for so long, a teenager
for so long, and your house for so long.
And most tragically, as Marcus really feels almost incomprehensibly, you don't get them forever at all, right? Just as they don't get you forever at all.
And we have to remind ourselves, as Epictetus says, that our precious one is not a possession.
They are a gift that we have temporarily, affirmerally, that we are losing not just day to day,
but also permanently all at once as well.
Hopefully in a long time,
but we cannot say that for certain.
And so to take them for granted,
to feel entitled to them, to mistreat them,
this is a profound sacrilege.
And we have to avoid that.
And one of the ways we do it is by reminding ourselves
of that ephemerality. We have to do this. We have to do it regularly. We have to do it consistently.
We have to do it as a practice. We have to say to ourselves, remember, we have to say to ourselves,
remember, without art mortal, we have to say to ourselves, the cup is already broken. It's already gone.
You have it now, but not forever.
Loss is a real fear because it's painful grief accompanies it.
And so many other painful things accompany it, but, but it is there.
And no amount of wishing otherwise makes it not the case, right?
No amount of accomplishment or achievement makes you less mortal.
You are mortal, you always have been.
And so is everyone and everything you've ever been connected to.
So let's live and act and treat people accordingly.
And let's do it before it's too late. Hey, Prime Members, you can listen to the Daily Stoic early and ad-free on Amazon Music,
download the Amazon Music app today, or you can listen early and ad-free with Wondery
Plus in Apple podcasts.
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