The Daily Stoic - You Can’t Make Them Appreciate It |The Most Important Thing You Can Do Every Day
Episode Date: January 9, 2024You do a lot. You try hard. You hold yourself to high standards—higher anyway, than most people. You’re not exactly a reincarnation of Cato but still, you’re doing great.But do people a...ppreciate this?Not really. Not nearly enough.But as we’ve said before, appreciation and recognition is not a thing we control. It’s not something that’s up to us. The line from that play about Cato, the one the Founders were so fond of, reminds us that we can’t demand a good reputation but we can deserve one. So it goes for appreciation.Besides, Marcus Aurelius would remind us that this appreciation and recognition is “the third thing”—the thanks on top for a person simply doing what needed to be done, as a parent, as a leader, as a human being. We don’t need that. It’s extra.-And in today's Daily Stoic video excerpt, Ryan talks about how Journaling is not just a little thing you do to pass the time, to write down your memories—though it can be—it’s a strategy that has helped brilliant, powerful and wise people become better at what they do. Whether you’re brand new to the concept of journaling or you’ve journaled in the past and fallen out of practice, this ultimate guide to journaling will tell you everything you need to know to help you make journaling one of the best things you do in 2020 and beyond. You’ll learn not only how to journal, but also the about the benefits of journaling, the famous journaling of the past 2,000 years, the best journals to use, and more.✉️ 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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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.
You can't make them appreciate it. You do a lot. You try hard. You hold yourself to
high standards, hire anyway than most people. You're not exactly a reincarnation of Kato,
but still you're doing great. But do people appreciate this? Not really. Not nearly enough.
But as we've said before, appreciation and recognition is not a thing we control. It's not
something that's up to us. That line from that play about Kato, the one the founders were so fond of, it reminds us that we
can't demand a good reputation, but we can deserve one. And so it goes for appreciation. Besides,
Mark Ceruleus would remind us that this appreciation and recognition is the third thing
that thanks on top for being a person simply doing what needed to be done as a parent, as a leader, as a human being.
We don't need that. It's extra.
So let us strive to be worthy of appreciation, but indifferent to whether we get it.
Let's keep trying. Let's keep holding ourselves to those standards.
Let's make Marcus and Kato and ourselves proud.
If anyone notices great, if not, well, that's not why we did it in the first place.
I remember very specifically, I rented an Airbnb in Santa Barbara. I was driving from San Francisco to Los Angeles.
I just sold my first book and I'd been working on it.
And I just needed a break, I needed to get away,
and I needed to have some quiet time to write.
And that was one of the first Airbnb's I ever started with.
And then when the book came out and it did well,
I bought my first house.
I would rent that house out during South by Southwest
and F1 and other events
in Austin. Maybe you've been in a similar place. You've stayed in an Airbnb and you thought
yourself this actually seems pretty doable. Maybe my place could be an Airbnb. You could
rent a spare bedroom, you could rent your whole place when you're away. Maybe you're planning
a ski getaway this winter or you're planning on going somewhere warmer while you're away,
you could Airbnb your home and make some extra money towards the trip. Whether you use the extra
money to cover some bills or for something a little more fun Airbnb your home and make some extra money towards the trip. Whether you use the extra money to cover some bills
or for something a little more fun,
your home could be worth more than you think.
Find out how much at Airbnb.ca slash host.
The page is forgiving and patient.
It keeps secrets, doesn't care if you're contradicting yourself,
it doesn't care if you're whining.
Just put it down on the page. The page will help.
Philosophy is not just this thing you read about one time
and understand it's an active practice.
It's something you're doing with yourself.
It's a dialogue with oneself.
It doesn't have to be this intense,
journaling conversation for pages and pages and pages.
Start small and then build.
So I've been journaling off and on for most of my life.
You know, I'd start when I was a kid, I would stop,
I would get started.
Like a lot of people, it was a habit that I knew was important,
but it just never really stuck.
And I remember I bought this most KNA.
This is when journaling really stuck for me.
And it's become part of my morning routine.
I've been on this philosophical journey,
this journey through stochism for a decade and a half now.
And a huge part of that journey has been journaling.
In fact, you could really argue that stochism
and journaling are inseparable from each other.
I've been doing this now for a long time
and I've been studying some of the great journaling practices
of creative people and leaders and thinkers and philosophers,
of course.
So in today's episode, I want to give you a bunch of secrets
to being a great journaler, to getting the most out
of your journaling practice.
Here we go. [♪ music playing in background, playing in journaling habit, I've recommended this a bunch of times,
I use a journal called the One Line a Day journal, but you go through it and you just write
one sentence every day.
So there's a mothering version, a father version, an parenting version, and a college, there's
all these different versions.
I just have a one and I write one sentence every day.
It is really easy to write one sentence per day.
So instead of thinking about this,
how do I start journaling?
How do I have a journal and have it?
It's more like what is the least amount of journaling
that I can do and start there?
It could just be writing down a quote
from one of the stoics each morning
and then kicking it around.
It could just be keeping a workout log.
Like start with something really small or easy
and I think that's a way to start the journaling.
There's some other great journals. The bullet journal is great.
The five minute journal, also really easy.
Like starting a journaling habit is hard.
Journaling for five minutes is easy.
So when you think about these habits that are intimidating or difficult or that you've tried and failed that before,
I think what the Stokes would recommend is start with something really easy to build on it.
EpicTitus talks about fueling the habit bonfire.
Like how can you just get a spark going
and then add to it from there?
So it doesn't have to be this intense journal
in conversation with yourself or pages and pages
and pages.
It takes years to work.
It's like if you wanted to start meditating,
meditate for 30 seconds.
Don't try to meditate on a 30-day silent meditation retreat.
That's going to be really intimidating and hard.
So start small and then build.
You know, my journal account is probably seven or eight years old now.
And as a result, I've worked myself up to a place where it's natural and effortless
and when I don't do it, it's almost painful.
But it took me a while to get there.
And this one line of day journal was a big breakthrough for me.
I started a practice that I've been doing now for 35 years,
which is every weekend I sit down for 20 to 30 minutes.
And I write down my key lessons of the week,
professionally and personally.
The things that actually, frankly, often were painful
because painful life lessons
are the raw material for our future wisdom.
So I would actually sit down and write down, okay,
I put that idea out to my leadership team,
but the two critics in the room who are always critics,
like, set all kinds of terrible things about it.
My lesson to myself is,
why don't I go to the critics before I present it to the whole group? They should have a problem. They of terrible things about it. My lesson to myself is, why don't I go to the critics
before I present it to the whole group?
They should have heard about that.
Exactly, they get their fingerprints on it.
And so like, okay, let's try that.
And it worked.
But anyway, 28, that sounded, I mean, that 63 now, I get it.
But 28, I didn't know that.
And so what I do is I make bullet points
of the key lessons of the week
and then how it will serve me in the future.
Sure.
And it would journaling does allow you to see patterns.
It would be fun to find.
How do I find that?
It is wisdom.
Yeah, of course.
And so the bottom line is, this is something I've been doing.
And then I brought it to my leadership teams
at Juada Viva Mabutico, a telecom company at Airbnb
and now at MEA Modern Ultra Academy,
where once a quarter, we sit down as a team
and we say what was our each of our biggest lessons
of the quarter and how we'll serve us moving forward.
Number one, number two is what was our biggest team lesson?
And so I'm a big believer, you know,
Peter Drucker coined the term knowledge worker in 1959,
saying that the world will be ruled by knowledge workers
with computers and he was right. But
the truth is we sort of moved, I think, to the wisdom economy
instead of an knowledge economy because in an era of AI,
where knowledge...
It's facts, figures, info. It's going to be a modifit.
Yeah. So wisdom becomes the scarce resource. So how do we
create wisdom workers? How do we create wisdom management and wisdom practices?
So what I just described here
is the wisdom practice of a leadership team.
Sorting through what was learned in the last quarter,
sharing it because it's a vulnerable process,
but also it means that your skin knee
means I won't have to skin my knee
because I'm learning from you.
Wisdom is not taught, it's shared.
And being able to understand that
is so critical in the era we live in.
Walter Isaacson, when he was writing his
epic biography of Steve Jobs,
talked about how they went
and they tried to find a bunch of old documents
and journals that Steve Jobs had done
on one of the early Macintoshes.
And even Steve Jobs, with all his computing genius and access to the best programmers and
designers and engineers in the world couldn't manage to get these files off this old Mac
The multi-Isakson was joking about how absurd that was, you know
You couldn't access these files that were just you know a decade a couple decades old at most and yet
that were just a decade, a couple decades old, at most. And yet, he could spend hours pouring over
the journals of Leonardo da Vinci.
Don't think of journaling as this epic thing,
but it also is important.
And there's something important
about doing it on physical paper.
I think it's good to be free of devices anyway
to have something that's not digital.
But I just love the idea that, you know, six, 700 years later, whatever,
Da Vinci's journals are still legible and usable,
but things that you did two iPhones ago
are lost all the time.
[♪ Music playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, is itself, I think, an insight into why he was a great leader. He's not publishing this book the way that people might publish today.
Like a CEO is writing memoirs or how to book,
because they want to get some attention.
Maybe it's good PR, right?
It burnishes their image.
Mark Simmelis was an intending anyone to read meditation.
He was writing it to himself,
whether he's leading the Roman army,
whether he's dealing with business in Rome,
whether he's traveling, he's writing these he's dealing with business in Rome, whether he's traveling,
he's writing these notes to himself about how to be better.
Meditations is a book for Marcus to be, as he says in meditation,
he says, you have to fight to be the person
that philosophy tried to make you.
Well, that's what he's doing in these pages of his journal,
talking himself about where he fell short,
talking about where he could do better, right?
He's doing a kind doing a daily interrogation, also a restatement of values and principles.
And I think it's important that he's doing this on the pages of his private journal, not
vomiting his stress or his disagreements or his grievances on other people.
And I mean, journaling is a really powerful trait for leaders.
I try to do mine in the morning
or in the evening before bed,
but just taking a few minutes, it calms me down.
It allows me to get a little distance
from myself and my thoughts.
And from this clarity, you can then go back
to what you have to do and carry that with you.
This has become a little bit of a ritual for me. It's the sixth time I've
done this. I finished my daily stove journal. This is my mother cover for it. So, you did it.
Journal every day. Then I have this cool leather cover on it to preserve it because it needs to grab out of it.
Started this September 22, and then take the new one,
slides in, and this side first.
It goes right here.
Tonight I'll do set it because exercise of the day in review.
In the morning I'll do Marcus's sort of day ahead.
And that's the Daily Stoic Journal,
which is a daily must have habit for me.
On the front of the cover, it says make time
because that's the hardest part about journal.
You've got to make time for it, you've got to do it.
And even though I've done now, these exact pages,
a half dozen times, I get something new out of the question each
time because all of the questions are the same. I am different and that's the
process. I'm using the daily sojournal which if you don't you should. I find when I
journal just the disk getting in from here to here. It's not very far. No, it's a huge
difference because now I can be like, that's insane.
That's right.
Don't tell anyone.
Don't tell anyone.
That's too like.
That's not a good way to treat people.
Or you're not being nice to yourself here.
Or that sounds silly when you stay out.
And then it's not here, it's here.
But I think also more importantly, it's not there.
Yeah.
It's not there.
It's not in the person in front of you in traffic.
This is a safe place.
That's a safe place.
Just like the counselor should be a safe place. Yeah. If they're not working their own agenda,
it should be a very safe place.
I'm sure many of you read Anne Frank's diary when you were in school. You've heard of it.
She has this great line in her diary, I think about. She says,
paper is more patient than people. Instead of vomiting your thoughts on your employees, on your friends,
on your coworkers, on the driver in front of you who's taking forever, put it on the page.
The page is forgiving and patient, it keeps secrets, doesn't care if you're
contradicting yourself, it doesn't care if you're being just put it down on the page, the page
will help, right? And I love the idea of having distance between you
and your thoughts.
Part of the reasons we're worked up
and anxious and stressed is that we're trapped
in our heads with all this stuff, right?
And you get it out and you see it from a distance
and you go, I don't even agree with my own thoughts here,
right?
I don't even like this.
I'm not gonna choose to carry this around.
So putting it down on the page is just really important.
These are some of Kennedy's doodles
during the Cuban Missile Crisis.
He was writing notes to himself thoughts,
but you can see his sort of brainstorming
working out of the stressful situation he's in.
And this is what journaling can help us to.
I was in Milan a few years ago
and I got to see some of Da Vinci's journals, right?
And I think it's also important just as a creativity exercise, right?
The journaling, the working, the sketching out, this is what creates the work, right?
You can't have the last supper without the journals, right?
So the idea of exploring, keeping a commonplace book, a place you collect ideas, you work
out your thoughts.
This is a really important exercise.
Epic Titus says, every night,
keep thoughts like these at hand,
write them, read them,
allow, talk to yourself and others about them.
I think this is an important part.
Stoicism isn't this thing you just absorb one time,
that's just in your brain and you have it forever.
It's actually an ongoing process and engage with the ideas over and over again.
One of the criticisms of Marx's releases
meditations by academics who don't get this
is that it's kind of repetitive.
It's repetitive, sure, but he was doing it
over a long period of time.
He might have wrote one entry
and then another one seven years later,
it could have been seven days apart.
But this is what he needed.
This is what he was struggling with.
He wasn't writing the journal for you.
He was writing them for himself,
and actually in Caribbean, that's what we,
what survives to us from Epictetus,
it's this idea of at hand.
It's there for you.
It's almost like a weapon.
So when you think of journaling,
don't think of it as putting down your thoughts
necessarily for history, performing for history, although that could be cool, depending on what you're experiencing.
But think about it also as a process that you are engaging in. Even though I know about and
write about stoicism, I also explore it privately in my journal every day, because I need reminders
of the ideas and spending time with them, writing them down, reminding myself of them,
reminders of the ideas and spending time with them, writing them down, reminding myself of them,
keeping them at hand, as Epictida says,
is it hugely beneficial exercise for me?
The first lesson I would give anyone about journaling
is like, just start, don't stress about.
Tools don't stress about.
Time don't stress about how much, how little should you read it
like, just do it, right?
Actually, one of the journals that I love, I love this one line a day journal, it was helpful
for me when I was getting started because it's just, you write, you just write one thing every day.
I've done one line a day now for five years. I'm almost finished with this. But the idea is,
everyone has time and the willpower to rate one sentence a day.
So don't start by saying, oh, I want to write 10 pages or I want to spend 30 minutes
generally, just like with meditation. Don't start with an hour long solo meditation.
Start with one minute or five minutes, right? Start really small. So the idea is to build
the habit, build the momentum, get into it, make it a habit, and then you can build.
So I started with something like the one line a day,
journal or the Daily Stone journal,
is an easy one too, because it's prompt,
the five minute journal is great, you've got five minutes,
to do something that helps build the practice.
Maybe just start a workout journal,
just log your workouts or a reading journal
or a food journal, start something that's more of a practice, and then it's building the skill,
the willpower for you to do it on an ongoing basis.
When I wrote The Daily Stoke eight years ago,
I had this crazy idea that I would just keep it going.
The book was 366 meditations,
but I write one more every single day,
and I'd give it away for free as an email
I thought maybe a few people would sign up couldn't have even comprehended a future in which three quarters of a million people would get this email every single day and would for
Almost a decade if you want to get the email if you want to be part of a community that is the largest group of stills ever assembled in human history
I'd love for you to join us
You can sign up and get the email totally for free. No spam, you can unsubscribe whenever you want at dailystoward.com.
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