What Not To Do With Your Freedom
Episode Date: February 25, 2019Last fall, there was a New York Times profile on what’s called the FIRE movement. FIRE stands for Financial Independence, Retire Early. The p...
For centuries, all sorts of people—generals and politicians, athletes and coaches, writers and leaders—have looked to the teachings of Stoicism to help guide their lives. Each day, author and speaker Ryan Holiday brings you a new lesson about life, inspired by the thoughts and writings of great Stoic thinkers like Marcus Aurelius and Seneca the Younger. Daily Stoic Podcast also features Q+As with listeners and interviews with notable figures from sports, academia, politics, and more. Learn more at DailyStoic.com.New episodes come out every day for free. Listen 1-week early on Wednesday, Saturday, and Sunday and to all episodes ad-free, with Wondery+ or Amazon Music with a Prime membership or Amazon Music Unlimited subscription.
2803 episodes transcribedLast fall, there was a New York Times profile on what’s called the FIRE movement. FIRE stands for Financial Independence, Retire Early. The p...
If you’re born into certain religious faiths, you tend to be raised with strong views on sex that come from on high. You’re not supposed to h...
Here’s the simple recipe for improvement and for happiness. It comes from Marcus Aurelius and the fact that it came from such a busy man with...
No matter what your profession is, there are things you can say that will cost you. Speaking up against somebody’s pet project can get an off...
Slavery is one of the most common metaphors in Seneca’s writing. He talks about people who are slaves to sex and slaves to work. He talks abo...
Epicurus’s final letter begins with a rather remarkable sentence: “On this happy day, which is the last day of my life, I write the following...
A few weeks ago, we ran an email about Austin Murphy, the former Sports Illustrated writer whose thirty year career (which included interview...
In Meditations, Marcus speaks passionately about escaping the “indelible stain” of power, of being changed by the purple cloak that the emper...
Our newest Daily Stoic coinSummum Bonum is an expression from Cicero, Rome’s greatest orator. In Latin, it means “the highest good.” And what...
In the winter of 1824, things were not looking good for Simon Bolivar. He was at one of the lowest points of his decade-plus long revolution...
Epictetus’s most powerful line is about how it’s not things that upset us, but what we think about things that does all the damage. What he r...
Seneca wrote constantly about time. One of his most compelling observations was about how people are protective of their money, their propert...
Seneca was a very rich man. He accumulated that fortune largely due to his service to Nero’s corrupt and broken regime, and then he put that...
No one would ever call Winston Churchill a quitter. His whole reputation is built on his instinct to fight. He was the lone objector when app...
Near the end of the Eisenhower Administration, the speechwriter James C. Humes was asked to help the president write a short address. After s...
The motto of the United States—seen imprinted on its currency and its buildings—is e pluribus unum: “Out of many, one.”It happens that this i...
If a close friend had their home broken into, you’d comfort them and tell them that it was only stuff that had been stolen. If your child bro...
In Richard III, Shakespeare has a scene where Brackenbury is handed orders from Richard by two men who clearly plan to murder the King’s brot...
Confucius was once asked by a student if there was a single word to to live by, a word that would always provide guidance and truth. He thoug...
Epicurus’s dictum was that “One sage is no wiser than another.” Clearly, Seneca agreed with this idea because he loved quoting Epicurus, even...