The Daily Stoic - You Don’t Love Yourself Enough | Ask Daily Stoic
Episode Date: December 12, 2024Each morning when you wake up, life presents you with an opportunity. You know what you’re capable of. The Daily Stoic New Year, New You Challenge is 3 weeks of ALL-NEW, actionable cha...llenges, presented in an email per day, built around the best, most timeless wisdom in Stoic philosophy, to help you create a better life, and a new you in 2025. Why 3 weeks? Because it takes human beings 21 days to build new habits and skills, to create the muscle memory of making beautiful choices each and every day.Head over to dailystoic.com/challenge today to sign up.🎙️ Follow The Daily Stoic Podcast on Instagram🎥 Watch top moments from The Daily Stoic Podcast on YouTube✉️ 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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So for this tour I was just doing in Europe, we had I think four days in London and I was with
my kids, my wife and my in-laws. So we knew we didn't want to stay in a hotel. We'd spend a
fortune. We'd be cramped. So we booked an Airbnb and it was awesome. As it happens, the Airbnb
we stayed in was like this super historic building.
I think it was where like the first meeting of the Red Cross or the Salvation Army ever was.
It was awesome. That's why I love staying in Airbnbs.
To stay in a cool place, you get a sense of what the place is actually like.
You're coming home to your house, not to the lobby of a hotel every night.
It just made it easier to coordinate everything and get a sense of what the city is like. When I spent last summer in LA, we used an Airbnb also. So you may have read
something that I wrote while staying in an Airbnb. Airbnb has the flexibility in size and location
that work for your family and you can always find awesome stuff. You click on guest favorites to
narrow your search down. Travel is always stressful. It's always hard to be away from home.
But if you're gonna do it, do it right.
And that's why you should check out Airbnb.
Welcome to the Daily Stoic Podcast,
where each day we read a passage of ancient wisdom
designed to help you in your everyday life.
Well, on Thursdays, we not only read the daily meditation,
but we answer some questions from listeners
and fellow Stoics who are trying to apply this philosophy just as you are. Some of these come from my talks,
some of these come from Zoom sessions that we do with daily Stoic life members or as part of the
challenges. Some of them are from interactions I have on the street when there happened to be someone there recording. Thank you for listening and we hope this is of use to you.
You don't love yourself enough.
Each morning you wake up and life presents you with an opportunity.
It's an opportunity to show up, to make a difference, to become the best version of
yourself.
But then what do you do?
You hit the snooze button.
You stay under the covers a while longer.
You get a late start on the day and suddenly all your plans get pushed back.
You chastise and berate yourself.
You start to feel like you'll never catch up, like the potential life you envision for
yourself will remain elusive, out of reach. Almost 2,000 years ago, Marcus Aurelius was the emperor of Rome, the most powerful man
on the planet, and he faced this exact dilemma.
He found himself making excuses that it was nice and warm under the covers, as he told
himself.
So you were born to feel nice, he writes in Meditations, instead of doing things and experiencing
them. He looked outside himself to the birds, the plants, theitations, instead of doing things and experiencing them. He looked outside
himself to the birds, the plants, the ants, all of which were going about their individual tasks,
putting the world in order as best they can. So what was his problem? Why couldn't he get out
of bed in the morning and do the same? You don't love yourself enough, he said, or you'd love your nature too and what it demands of you.
And you could say that each year presents the same opportunity, right?
Chance to show up, to make a difference, to become the best version of yourself, to do
what you need to do.
The world needed Marcus Aurelius to become the person we admire and study today.
It required conscious and consistent effort on his part.
It required him to challenge himself, demanded that he woke up each morning and got to work
on his individual tasks, putting the world in order as best he could.
You are no different and you know it.
You have the ideas, you've made the plans, but you haven't acted.
So let's do it now.
Now is the best time to start.
Not Monday, not 2026,
not when life feels easier or more convenient.
If you wait for the perfect moment, it'll never come.
Someone has to take control of someone
and that someone is you.
The question remains, how?
Well, we created the Daily Stoic New Year New You Challenge
to answer just that, to help you create a better life,
a better you in 2025, to help you create a better life, a better you in 2025,
to help you show up and challenge yourself today. Since August, me and the Daily Stoic team have
been developing these challenges one per day, built around the best, most timeless stoic wisdom. It's
21 challenges in a row to kick off a new you in a new year. And this year's challenge is new stuff
designed to help you stop procrastinating,
learn new skills, conquer insecurities, be more generous, appreciate the world around you,
become the best version of yourself.
And these aren't pie in the sky theoretical discussions, which the stoics loathe,
but clear immediate exercises and methods you can start right now.
We'll tell you exactly what to do, how to do it, why it works.
We'll give you strategies for maintaining this way of living, not just for the rest of the year, but hopefully for your whole life.
Because this version of you, the one that you know is there, is what the world needs right now.
Just like the dancer was born to dance, the social climber for status, the miser for money, you were born for something too.
Is helping others less valuable to you, Marcus Wright, not worth your effort?
You know the answer. You know what you're capable of. Is helping others less valuable to you, Marcus Wright, not worth your effort?
You know the answer.
You know what you're capable of.
You know you weren't born under the covers to stay nice,
to let another year pass by
not being what you're capable of being.
And the Daily Stoic 2025 New Year,
New You Challenge starts on January 1st.
Don't procrastinate, don't put it off.
I want to see you in there.
I'm going to be in there with you.
You can sign up right now at dailystoic.com slash challenge.
Hey, it's Ryan.
Welcome to another Thursday episode
of the Daily Stoic Podcast.
You know we do Q and A's and one of my favorite parts
of the New Year New You Challenge is the Q and A's.
We do a bunch of live sessions.
We're all, you know, trying to kick the new year off right.
We're doing it together.
So thousands of stoics all over the world
do the New Year New You Challenge.
It's gonna start on January 1st.
But we've been doing it now for like seven years.
So we have lots of those sessions recorded.
And so for today's Q&A,
I thought I'd bring you some questions
that popped up in the 2022
session from the Daily Stoic New Year New Challenge. These are some awesome questions from some folks
and we'll just get into it. And if you want to join us in the Daily Stoic New Year New Challenge,
you can sign up right now at dailystoic.com slash challenge and maybe ask me a question as well.
I'll talk to you soon.
challenge and maybe ask me a question as well. I'll talk to you soon.
So I wanted to ask you, I remember yours is presence,
your word for the year, which is awesome.
I wanted to ask who you were,
what leader you were going to study this year.
Yeah, I've been going back and forth on that.
And that was the question I was going to ask everyone.
I was going to ask what you chose for that day.
I would, an important caveat, because I think hero is important and that is a big part of it,
but it's also, it's not just like who are you worshiping, but how are you studying that person?
Right? So what I see that as being the imperative this year is studying that person, warts and all really sort of going in depth
on those people.
So the book that I'm gonna write next,
I'm just finishing the discipline book,
which is the second in the Four Virtues series,
is gonna be on justice.
So I'm thinking about justice a lot.
And so I haven't quite,
I read the Taylor Branch series on Martin Luther King
over the last sort of two years.
And now I'm reading the David Halberstram bio on the,
it's called the children.
And it's about the men and women
who orchestrated the first sit-ins and freedom rides.
So I think I'm gonna do some civil rights figure.
I'm sort of going back and forth as to who that might be.
I might be more of a sort of a general bucket of that,
but that's sort of what I'm gonna build the book around.
It's a little different for me
because I sort of have my personal heroes
and then I have like, well, who am I needing
to really focus on for the specific thing
that I'm thinking about
or writing about.
But I was just reading about John Lewis this morning
as part of it.
And I know there's a new biography of John Lewis coming out.
So I'll probably do something in that space.
Yeah, I haven't exactly nailed down the figure,
but I have the sort of bucket
and I'm sort of reading generally in that space right now.
But thank you for prompting me on that.
Let's, if anyone wants to share as they go through,
we'll do more of that.
And Nick, thank you very much for the kind words
and for starting us off.
Thank you.
The thing that I want to ask you,
like, you know, stoicism is a path
which requires immense discipline,
but I'm just 25 years old
and I have a lot of social circle,
but still, you know, I have seen people calling me indifferent, like indifferent, I don't feel anything or like you know I've been doing the part.
And there are a lot of disbeliefs for my beliefs out there. So how do I, you know, cope up with that staying positively, you know, maintaining that positive aura around me. Yeah. So indifferent is a tricky word, right?
Because I think a lot of people think indifferent means that you are apathetic or that you're
somehow resigned. I think for the Stoics, indifference was more, I think the word has
more a connotation of resilience or flexibility.
So actually when I interviewed Chaka Smart,
who was the head basketball coach at University of Texas,
and then he's now the head coach at Marquette,
I was asking him how he,
this is part of the Daily Stoke Leadership Challenge,
which I recommend if people want to check it out.
You can listen to the whole interview.
But anyways, I was asking him how he was adjusting
to the cold, because I remember when I met him a few times
while he was down here, he was talking about how much
he enjoyed the hot Texas weather.
It was very different than where he was from.
And I said, how are you adjusting to the cold?
And he said, I said, are you a warm weather guy
or a cold weather guy?
And he said, you know what,
I'm a dress for the weather guy, right?
Which to me, that's what indifference is, right?
So indifference isn't like, I have no emotions, I have no thoughts, no opinions.
Indifference to me is, I make whatever it is work, right?
And so often to me, I see that as a very optimistic attitude, right?
A pessimistic person would be like, oh, I hate the weather here.
Or like, oh, I wish I was somewhere else.
To me, the stoic idea of indifference is like, this is nice.
I like this, right?
It's finding what you like in that thing.
So to me, that's what it's about.
So there's, there is, yes, kind of this little bit of resignation and a little bit of passivity
or acceptance to it,
but there's also a kind of an optimism
and a resilience to it that I try to cultivate in my life.
I'm not perfect at it.
I don't think Marcus Aurelius was perfect at it.
He reminds himself many times in meditations,
not to complain, not to be depressed, et cetera.
But to me, that's the idea.
Someone saying they have a question about humor, but then they don't actually give the question about humor. So I will bring up a funny story about the stoics and humor, which I have talked't have a sense of humor, but it's important to remember that Chrysippus, one of the early Stoics, dies of laughter. He enjoys it so he's laughing
at one of his own jokes so hard that he peels over and dies. And I've always taken that as a reminder
of, you know, the Stoic can have a good time and laugh of it.
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 of years we've been doing it.
It's an honor.
Please spread the word, tell people about it. And this isn't to sell anything. I just
wanted to say thank you.
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