The Daily Stoic - You Must Be Willing To Stand Alone | On Handling Haters
Episode Date: September 20, 2021Ryan explains why no matter the circumstances courage is always required, and reads this week’s meditation from The Daily Stoic Journal, on today’s Daily Stoic Podcast.Pre-orders are avai...lable for Ryan Holiday’s new book Courage Is Calling: Fortune Favors The Brave - check it out at https://dailystoic.com/preorderSign up for the Daily Stoic email: https://DailyStoic.com/emailFollow 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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Hey, prime members. You can listen to the Daily Stoic podcast early and add free on Amazon music. Download the app today.
Welcome to the Daily Stoic podcast. Each day we bring you a meditation inspired by the ancient Stoics illustrated with stories from history, current events, and literature to help you be better at what you do. And at the beginning of the week,
we try to do a deeper dive,
setting a kind of stoic intention for the week,
something to meditate on, something to think on,
something to leave you with, to journal about,
whatever it is you happen to be doing.
So let's get into it.
Hi, I'm David Brown, the host of Wunderree's
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You must be willing to stand alone.
It's hard to read about Kato's life and not be struck about how often the man stood alone. It's hard to read about Kato's life and not be struck about how often the man stood
alone. He stood alone in his efforts to reform Rome's treasury, the sole voice in opposition
to spending money the empire didn't have. He stood alone when he refused to buy elections.
He stood alone in how he dressed. He stood alone when he fell a buster against bad laws.
And Asanica would write, Kato stood alone against the vices of a degenerate state that was sinking to destruction beneath its
very weight.
And he stayed the fall of the Republic to the utmost that one man's hand could do to
draw it back.
But of course we can't all be Cato's as the saying goes.
Most of us are more like Harry T. Byrne, whose story I detail encourages Colin. In August 1920 Byrne was
just an ordinary 25-year-old politician in the Tennessee State Assembly. Harry was not a crusader.
He had no history of bold stands or brave votes. My vote will never hurt you. He reassured his
political bosses who were firmly against ratifying the 19th Amendment, which would infranchise women.
They believed him and he delivered, voting twice to table the discussion of ratification.
You can imagine the surprise then, when on August 18th, his eye not only ratified the
amendment in Tennessee, but triggered its passage nationwide.
Bern was not steeped in courage.
This would have been the scariest moment of his life,
but when courage came calling, he answered. And as we talked about last Monday, he mustered
20 seconds of courage, and in an instant gave the vote to 20 million women. Would he have
rather remained an ordinary politician? Probably. Would he have rather gone along with
something that kept most of his constituents happy?
Sure.
Just as he probably never wished to be put in the position in the first place, but such
as life.
Fate and fortune don't care about our rathers.
You will have to stand alone from time to time, refuse to go along, insist on speaking
up, push through that pit in your stomach.
Not just step away from the herd, but get up in front of them and say what you truly think and feel.
Yes, you, you yourself must be willing to be that person. You must be willing to stand alone.
Standing alone is a difficult thing. It's a controversial thing. It is unfortunately a rare thing, but we need it now more than ever, lest we go the way of
Cato's Rome.
And of course, this is a topic of my newest book, Courage is Calling Fortune Favors the
Bold.
I have a wonderful chapter about the little-known Harry Burn.
I contrast him to the always surprising John McCain, War hero and Maverick Senator.
But the idea of courage is calling,
it's not that courage is always running
into a burning building around the battlefield.
It's doing the right thing, even when everyone
doesn't think you have what it takes
or wants you to do the exact opposite.
I really do hope you check out the new book,
Courage is Calling Fortune, Favres the Bold.
It's my newest series on the four Stoic virtues.
Matthew McConaughey is called
an urgent call to arms for each and every one of us General Mattis, our former secretary
defense, called it a superb handbook for crafting a purposeful life. You can get a bunch of
awesome pre-order bonuses before it's out at the end of September. Just go to dailystoic.com
slash pre-order to check that out, order in any format, order sign copies for me. You www.signcopiesforme.com slash pre-order. On handling haters 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, Steve Enhancelman. I actually do this
journal every single day. There's a question in the morning, a question in the
afternoon, and then 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 from me in the Daily Stoke store. It's store.dailystoke.com.
The Stoics taught that kindness trumps hate. They believed that those who engage in hate
are prisoners to a destructive passion.
One that hurts the practitioner, not the intended target.
There's no reason to hate a hate or there,
already suffering enough.
In fact, when we see them this way,
it makes it easier to be kind,
good-natured, genuine, and useful.
Remember that line in the Bible
about how loving
your enemies is like pouring hot coals on them because it's so unexpected.
What can surprise you that way? Whose enmity can you meet with kindness and
compassion and how much better do you feel when you've done so? You know, this is
something I've struggled with a bit
recently, just having watched my stuff
on social media get attacked by a brigand of sort of crazy
anti-vaxxers and COVID deniers and weird trolls.
And you know, sometimes I have fun with it.
Sometimes I like to stir it up a bit.
I try not to get angry about it.
Something that makes me angry, but there is a part of it that makes me really sad,
really frustrated because it's not that I can't take it.
I can take it, but what I understand is how these ideas
are rippling through and influencing other people,
making them do, or making them fall prey to misinformation
or participate in anti-social behavior.
But I do try to remember this idea that hurt people,
hurt people.
And as a great expression,
I found it to be very true in my life.
But I thought I would give you that thought
as we get into today's quotes.
The first is from Mark Sere Relias Meditations 11-3.
What if someone despises me?
He says, let them see to it.
But I will see to it that I won't be found doing
or saying anything contemptible.
What if someone hates me?
Let them see to that.
But I will see to it that I'm kind and good-natured to it all
and be prepared to show even the hate
or where they went wrong. Not in a and be prepared to show even the hate or where they
went wrong, not in a critical way, or to show off my patience, but genuinely and usefully.
So when I respond, I try to have fun with it.
And if it doesn't always come off as I'm having fun, I assure you I am having fun.
If you can't troll the trolls back, then in a sense they are winning.
But let's go to Meditations 11, 18. Kindness is
invincible, but only when it's sincere and with no hypocrisy or faking. For what
even can the most malicious person do if you keep showing kindness and if given
the chance you gently try to point out where they went wrong, right, as they were
trying to harm you. This is the hard part, and I talked about this with Brad Stone
and his book about
Jeff Bezos. You know, Jeff Bezos heard very early on from his grandfather that it's easier to
be clever than kind. And I would say this totally drives with my experience. It's easy to have a
witty comeback. It's easy to be sarcastic. It's easy to dunk on someone to point out the obvious
and ridiculous flaws or contradictions in their argument or even to focus on the
horrific
implications of what they're saying and point out the cost of their behavior, but
kindness is almost certainly what is going to convince someone, right?
Patience is what it's going to take to convince them and when attack, you're almost certainly making them dig in more.
And I have to remind myself of this.
And then finally, we have epictetus in Coretian 20.
Keep in mind that it isn't the one who has it in for you
and takes a swipe that harms you,
but rather the harm comes from your own belief
about the abuse.
So when someone arouses your anger,
note that it's really your own opinion that's fueling it.
Instead, make it your first response,
not to be carried away by such impressions
for what time and distance self-nastory
is more easily achieved.
The other thought I would add to this
is with the new book coming out, Courage is Calling.
You know, I've never put out a book
and not seen some people react negatively,
meanly, aggressively about, you know,
this thing that I just spent so much time and energy on.
And that's something you learn when you put out stuff
into the world.
I talked about this with Malcolm Gladwell in the podcast.
The people who dislike what you do are almost always louder
than the people who are like,
oh, it's pretty good, I liked it, right?
Most of the things you like, you just sort of nod your head and move on,
but it's the things you really hate.
That's what seems to get us riled up
and that's what we seem to talk about most.
We complain about most.
So anyone that puts anything out in the world
has to understand how to handle haters,
not to be triggered by them,
not to be distracted by them,
not to be made bitter by them,
not to be made worse by them.
That's what I'm thinking about as I go into this new book.
If you're not a hater, I would like to tell you about it. You pick up courage is calling Fortune Favours the Bolt.
It's out in a week. I can't believe that's true. I would say I eagerly await what you think of it, but I'm going to try to tune out what people think about it.
Good or bad and just focus on knowing that I know I wrote the best book that I'm capable of writing. But you can check out we have a bunch of pre-order
bonuses and you can pick those up at dailystalk.com slash pre-order. I hope you
I do hope you like the book. I know it's good. I think you'll agree. I hope you're
not a hater. I hope you can find some more courage in your life. Check out the new
book courage is calling Fortune favors the brave dailystalk.com slash pre-order
pick up the book anywhere you want but if if you want to get the preorder stuff, it's all
right there.
Talk soon.
Hey, prime members, you can listen to the daily stoke early and add free on Amazon music.
Download the Amazon music app today, or you can listen early and add free with Wondery
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