Title | : | The Daily Stoic: 366 Meditations on Wisdom, Perseverance, and the Art of Living |
Author | : | |
Rating | : | |
ISBN | : | - |
Language | : | English |
Format Type | : | Hardcover |
Number of Pages | : | 416 |
Publication | : | First published October 18, 2016 |
ISBN 9780735211735.
A beautifully packaged daily devotional of Stoic wisdom, featuring new translations of the most celebrated Stoics with historical context and practical tips from bestselling author Ryan Holiday.
Stoic philosophy has long been the secret weapon of history’s greatest and wisest leaders--from emperors to artists, activists to fighter pilots. Today, people of all stripes are seeking out Stoicism’s unique blend of practicality and wisdom as they look for answers to the great questions of daily life.
Where should they start? Epictetus? Marcus Aurelius? Seneca? Which edition? Which translator? Presented in a page-per-day format, this daily resource combines all new translations done by Stephen Hanselman of the greatest passages from the great Stoics (including several lesser known philosophers like Zeno, Cleanthes and Musonius Rufus) with helpful commentary.
Building on the organizational structure in Ryan Holiday’s cult classic The Obstacle is the Way, this guide also features twelve monthly themes (and helpful glossary) for clarifying perception, improving action, and unlocking the power of will. Aimed at the high-octane, action-oriented doers of our wired world, this book brings new daily rituals and new perspectives to produce balanced action, insight, effectiveness, and serenity.
The Daily Stoic: 366 Meditations on Wisdom, Perseverance, and the Art of Living Reviews
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I’ve read this book already but i still read it everyday. It serves as a book vitamin to me.
❦ It helps me have a positive attitude when i’m feeling down.
❦ It gives me a whole a new perspective.
❦ It helps open my mind and help me understand things.
❦ It helps me find something positive in a negative situation.
❦ It just lifts me.
It may be short but i believe it still served its purpose.
These are just some of the things that this book did to me. I do hope it has the same effect on you. And aside from this book, prayers will definitely work wonders, no doubt about it (other religions, please don’t take offense in this - i apologize if i’ve offended anyone with this, that’s not my intention).
Happy reading!!! :) -
Read it in just under 6 weeks, rather than a year. Some days are repetitive, but then again so is life, since lessons tend to be repeated until learnt. But as the conclusion says, theory is easy, practice is hard (and never-ending).
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Stoicism in a nutshell: Virtue (four cardinal virtues of self-control, courage, justice and wisdom) is happiness, and it is our perception of things - rather than the things themsleves - that cause most of our trouble.
The three most essential parts of Stoic philosophy:
Control your perceptions.
Direct your actions properly.
Willingly accept what's outside your control.
When your efforts are not directed towards a cause or purpose, how will you know what to say no to and what to say yes to? How will you know when you have had enough, when you've reached your goal, when you've gotten off track, if you've never defined what those things are?
Serenity and stability are results of your choices and judgment, not your environment. If you seek to avoid all disruptions to tranquility, you will never be successful. Your problems will follow you wherever you run and hide.
External things can't fix internal issues. Money only marginally changes life. It doesn't solve the problems that people without it seem to think it will.
When I see an anxious person, I ask: What do they want? For if a person wasn't wanting something outside their control, why would they be stricken by anxiety?
The next time you find yourself in the middle of a freakout or breakout, stop a moment and ask yourself: Is this helping me feel better?
It is important to connect the so-called temptation with its actual effects. Once you understand that indulging might actually be worse than resisting, the urge begins to lose its appeal.
It is the privilege of the gods to want nothing, and of godlike men to want little. To want nothing makes you invincible, because nothing lies outside of your control.
The more things we desire and the more we have to do to earn or attain these achievements, the less we actually enjoy our lives - and the less free we are.
It's not about avoidance or shunning, but rather not giving any possible outcome more power or preference than is appropriate. This is not easy to do, certainly, but if you could manage, how much more relaxed would you be?
Curb your desire - don't set your heart on so many things and you will get what you need. Train your mind to ask: "Do I need this thing? What will happen if I do not get it? Can I make do without it?"
"The cause of my irritation is not in this person but in me." Our labels, our expectations.
There are two ways to be wealthy, to get everything you want or to want everything you have.
People put a great deal of effort into ensuring that money is real, whereas we accept potentially life-changing thoughts or assumptions without so much as a question. One ironic assumption along these lines: That having a lot of money makes you wealthy. Or that because a lot of people believe something, that it must be true.
At the end of your time on this planet, what expertise is going to be more valuable, your understanding of matters of living and dying, or your knowledge of celebrity lives / intricacies of plot points of your favourite TV series / insert random vice or obsession here?
Everything we do has a toll attached to it. Waiting around is a tax on travelling. Rumours and gossip are the tax that come from acquiring a public persona. Disagreements and occasional frustration are taxes placed on even the happiest of relationships. There are many forms of taxes in life. You can argue with them, you can go to great - but ultimately futile - lengths to evade them, or you can simply pay them and enjoy the fruits of what you get to keep.
"If you don't take the money, they can't tell you what to do." Wanting makes you a servant.
Make character your loudest statement. Do, don't just say.
God laid down this law, saying: if you want some good, get it from yourself. - Epictetus.
Reflect then, that your ancestors set up these trophies, not that you may gaze at them in wonder, but that you may also imitate the virtues of the men who set them up.
Take pleasure in taking the right actions, rather than the results that come from them. Focus on what you can control.
Joy for human beings lies in proper human work. And proper human work consists in: acts of kindness to other human beings, disdain for the stirring of the senses, identifying trustworthy impressions, and contemplating the natural order and all that happens in keeping with it.
The first two things before acting: Don't get upset. And do the right thing.
Succumbing to the self-pity and "woe is me" narrative accomplishes nothing - nothing except sapping you of the energy and motivation you need to do something about your problem.
A trained mind is better than any script. And and far better booster of confidence.
Don't think of how you HAVE to do something, but rather how you GET TO do it. Receive and respond to the will in the world.
Appeal to self-interest, rather than moralise. SHOW how something is bad, rather than just say it is bad.
Remember then, if you deem what is by nature slavish to be free, and what is not your own to be yours, you will be shackled and miserable, blaming both gods and other people. But if you deem as your own only what is yours, and what belongs to others as truly not yours, then no one will ever be able to coerce or to stop you, you will find no one to blame or accuse, you will do nothing against your will, you will have no enemy, no one will harm you, because no harm can affect you.
Anyone who truly wants to be free, won't desire something that is actually in someone else's control, unless they want to be a slave.
Take days off from work, not learning.
Better to trip with the feet than the tongue. Words can't be unsaid.
A virtuous person is generous with assumptions: that something was an accident, that someone didn't know, that it won't happen again. This makes life easier to bear and makes us more tolerant. Meanwhile - assuming malice - the most hasty of judgments - makes everything harder to bear.
Cease to hope and you will cease to fear. The primary cause of both these ills is that instead of adapting ourselves to present circumstances we send out thoughts too far ahead.
Fortune falls heavily on those for whom she's unexpected. The one always on the lookout easily endures.
"I would choose being sick over living in luxury, for being sick only harms the body, whereas luxury destroys both the body and the soul, causing weakness and incapacity in the body, and lack of control and cowardice in the soul. What's more, luxury breeds injustice because it also breeds greediness."
No person hands out money to passersby, but to how many do each of us hand out our lives! We're tight-fisted with property and money, yet think too little of wasting time, the one thing about which we should all be the toughest misers. -
The meditations are so short that they cannot satisfy my daily thirst. However, because the texts are not tightly connected, "reading" quickly on one-go feels like drinking too many different beverages at the same time; soon you lose your feeling.
What this book did do is to re-awaken my interest in stoicism and my desire to go back to the actual texts, which are much more thoughtful and profound, and hence significantly more delightful. -
1, 73 din 5.
(Încă) una dintre nenumăratele confecții care gîdilă interesul contemporan pentru stoici.
Autorul e foarte sigur că această revenire a stoicilor în actualitate i se datorează exclusiv (Pierre Hadot și Michel Foucault n-au avut, săracii, nici o contribuție): „În prezent (mai ales după recenta publicare a cărții mele The Obstacle is the Way – Obstacolul este calea), stoicismul și-a găsit un public nou și variat, printre care se numără echipele de antrenori ale celor de la New England Patriots și Seattle Seahawks, rapperul LL Cool J, crainica Michele Tafoya, precum și numeroși alți sportivi profesioniști, directori executivi, manageri de fonduri speculative, artiști, persoane în funcții de conducere și figuri publice” (pp.10-11).
Nu trebuie să-l uităm nici pe generalul NATO, James Mattis, poreclit „Cîinele turbat”, care purta în misiunile sale din Irak și Afganistan - inspirat de Ryan Holiday, desigur - o ediție din Gînduri către mine însumi de Marcus Aurelius (p.12). Așa a procedat odinioară și Alexandru Macedon în expediția din Asia: dormea cu Homer sub pernă. Nu am nici o îndoială că sursa excelentei imagini de sine a autorului cărții de față e stoicismul...
Ryan Holiday a ales 366 de pasaje din scrierile lui Seneca, Epictet și Marcus Aurelius și le-a așezat într-un „calendar al înțelepciunii”. Cititorul e îndemnat să mediteze în fiecare zi la cîte o frază. În 5 ianuarie, e bine să citim cu luare aminte această cugetare a lui Seneca (Despre liniștea sufletului. Către Serenus, 12: 5):„Orice efort trebuie să aibă un scop, să privească într-o direcție! Nu hărnicia îi tulbură pe cei neliniștiți ca pe niște nebuni, ci părerile false despre lucruri”.
De obicei, Bogdan Ghiurco îi traduce pe Seneca (și pe ceilalți înțelepți) după traducerea engleză aflată în The Daily Stoic: 366 Meditations for Clarity, Effectiveness, and Serenity. Dacă verificăm o versiune românească după originalul latin, diferența de sens este considerabilă. Iată fragmentul de mai sus în varianta unui clasicist:„Orice strădanie a noastră să se îndrepte spre un ţel precis. Pe aceşti oameni fără astîmpăr nu îi frămîntă atingerea unei ținte adevărate, ci nişte pricini închipuite. Nici măcar nebunii nu se agită fără temei, ci îi stîrneşte o închipuire a cărei zădărnicie n-o înţelege mintea lor înfierbîntată” (traducere de Svetlana Sterescu).
Abia acum fraza lui Seneca e limpede.
Am verificat și alte citate. Toate sînt (și sună) anapoda. Legătura lor cu originalul latin este foarte firavă. Să mai spun că fiecare pasaj din stoici e urmat de un comentariu? Da, Ryan Holiday încearcă să ne ajute să înțelegem ce a vrut să spună filosoful. Din păcate, aceste tentative de explicații sînt nu doar rudimentare, ci și triviale. Autorul are darul de a banaliza orice. Marcus Aurelius se întreabă dacă tiranii, paricizii, tîlharii au simțit vreodată o plăcere și cît de mare a fost ea (Gînduri pentru mine însumi, 6: 34). Este o nedumerire, împăratul nu dă nici un răspuns. Din întrebarea lui nu putem deduce nimic.
Ce a priceput Ryan Holiday: „Nu se cuvine să-i judecăm pe alții, dar merită totuși să analizăm un pic ce înseamnă un trai plin de răsfăț... Uită-te la un dictator și la haremul lui sufocat de urzelile și comploturile ibovnicelor. Uită-te cît de repede petrecerea unei tinere starlete se transformă în dependență de droguri și o carieră stagnantă. Întreabă-te: oare chiar merită? Oare plăcerea este chiar atît de mare?” (p.78).
Dar nu despre asta e vorba în întrebarea împăratului. Marcus Aurelius se referă, pur și simplu, la relația nelegiuiților cu plăcerea. Pot trăi o plăcere au ba? NU pomenește nicăieri de „traiul plin de răsfăț” al ticăloșilor și nici de ibovnice.
Observații critice aș mai avea, dar mă tem că vă țin din treabă... -
Life changing. Reading it over. Every day. Every year.
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This was a really good collection of quotes from Stoic philosophers such as Seneca, Marcus Aurelius, and Epictetus and daily meditations from the authors Ryan Holiday and Stephen Hanselman. I read two meditations a day from December 2016 to July 2017. I enjoyed learning from the wisdom of these philosophers who lived around 2,000 years ago and it amazes me that their words stand the test of time. Big takeaways from the book: Be good, accept the things you can control, realize that the outcome of things is controlled by someone or something bigger than yourself, and finally practice what you preach by living out the wisdom and teachings that you read.
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Stoicism is an ancient philosophy. It asserts that virtue (meaning self-control, courage, justice, and wisdom) is happiness. To achieve virtue, and thus live happily, one must master the three Stoic disciplines: perceptions (how you see and understand the world), actions (how you act based on what you see), and will (how you feel when events are outside your control).
The Daily Stoic is an exercise guide, not a history of Stoicism. Its goal is to help you understand the three disciplines - perception, action, and will - and apply lessons from each to your life. Each day, you’re presented with a Stoic lesson, explained in modern language, with advice about how to apply it in everyday life.
When studying Stoicism in the past, I’ve encountered two problems. The original sources can difficult to read. Simply put, we spoke differently 2,000 years ago. Stoicism is full of important lessons, but they can be lost when struggling with the language in Meditations by Marcus Aurelius and Letters from a Stoic by Seneca. Books like The Obstacle is the Way and a Guide to the Good Life help by interpreting and summarizing the lessons for a modern audience. But Stoicism contains hundreds lessons about how to live well, and modern summaries can be difficult to remember and apply them all.
This is where The Daily Stoic shines. Not only does it make Stoic lessons easy to understand and apply, it focuses you on just one lesson per day. I find this format - a daily practice guide - the most effective way of reading, understanding, and applying Stoicism. -
It's perfect for it's purpose, a daily dip into stoic wisdom. Those who rated it one star are judging against a standard it's not attempting to meet. The author does not claim to give the best translations, only accessible ones.
I'm probably going to end up buying this and reading it daily for years.
For those looking for deep dives rather than a daily dip, read Long's translation of Meditations (or Hays for a version that's like having the author put his hand on his shoulder and advise you, while standing in a muddy field).
There are a lot of translations, look until you find one you like! -
I am a fan of some of Marcus Aurelius' writing so I bought this book looking forward to discovering other ancient Stoic writers. Instead, I found mostly the interpretations of the editor with just small snippets from the Stoic greats. Sometimes it's hard to find the Stoic quotes amidst the simplistic and shallow commentary of the editor.
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December Non-fiction book of the month!
“God, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, the courage to change the things I can, and the wisdom to know the difference.”
I came upon this book when a friend posted one of the pages on IG and I thought that I would enjoy the book and the format. I have read a book about stoicism by Holiday and wasn’t the biggest fan -Because of the preachy writing style and not the concept itself- I was looking for a Non-fiction book for December to wrap up the year with and I suddenly found myself reading this too!
The full title is The Daily Stoic: 366 Meditations for Clarity, Effectiveness, and Serenity. The book features 366 ideas, each with a quote from one of the leading figures of Stoicism, each is approximately one page long and has the author’s interpretation after the quote.
I think the book formula make it easy to read but I really can’t read one page per day for one year. I am just the type of reader who gets bored easily of seeing the same book for a long time and I am simply a dynamic reader so I read the whole book within the last month of the year. I think it is not formatted to be binged as I did but I would not have been able to finish it otherwise.
I think Stoicism is cool and I don’t agree with all the concepts presented but I agree with the majority of them. I am more convinced that Stoicism is best taken from those figures being quoted here like Seneca, Marcus Aurelius & Epictetus because their writings are not that complex and do not need that much interpretation.
In one page the author discusses anxiety and says: “The pragmatist, the person of action, is too buy to waste time on such silliness,” I had to stop while reading and go over this again and again because I believe the author meant well by it but it rubbed me the wrong way because I do have anxiety and some things are out of my control. I wouldn’t like to be called silly for that! I like the concept of stoicism but some things are just out of our control!
Summary: I think it is a simple book that relies heavily on quoting old philosophers and then interpreting them in a very simple way. Most of the things did not need the interpretation and the format is a little bit tricky. I think if I want to read more about the concept, I will check out the sources used here next time as they are not complex and provide something original! -
Gave up pretty quickly on this as the commentaries attached to each quotation are clearly geared to "high-octane, action-oriented" douchebros. Skip this and just read to the actual sources. To be fair, I should have looked up this Ryan Holiday asshole beforehand, and I wouldn't have bothered.
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I'd recommend reading the quotes, and ignoring the flawed analysis offered by Holiday. His view of Stoicism is rooted in financial and personal gain, which is antithetical to the true nature of the philosophy. There are many great modern authors attempting to revive Stoicism, and I don't believe Holiday is one of them. In trying to appeal to a wide audience and portray it as a "life hack", it becomes a shell of itself and loses it's credibility. He focuses on success and ignores virtue, arguably changing the philosophy so far as to be unrecognizable. All the ancient Stoics believed eudaimonia (happiness, or flourishing) could be achieved independently of your external circumstances. Epictetus, one of the most influential Stoics, spent most of his life as a slave. Success meant nothing to him. Virtue should be thought of as the only true good, as that is the core of the philosophy, and there is little focus on that in this book.
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This book is seriously life changing. I couldn't imagine my life without it. I'm on my second, going on a third (surely not the last one) loop.
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I’ve been reading this book of daily readings, for just over a year now. I may have missed an occasional day here and there, but I will be reading it again and again. It’s that good. Every daily reading starts with a short quote from one of the Stoic practitioners, followed by a commentary. I love starting my day with prayers, as well as a few other favorites. I have found that it helps to set the right tone for the rest of my day.
I have many favorite quotes. Here are just a few of them.
Circle of Control
“… a wise person knows what’s inside their circle of control and what is outside of it.
The good news is that it’s pretty easy to remember what is inside our control. According to the Stoics, the circle of control contains just one thing: YOUR MIND. That’s right, even your physical body isn’t completely within the circle. After all, you could be struck with a physical illness or impairment at any moment. You could be traveling in a foreign country and be thrown in jail.
But this is all good news because it drastically reduces the amount of things that you need to think about. There is clarity in simplicity. While everyone else is running around with a list of responsibilities a mile long – things that they’re not actually responsible for – you’ve got just that one-item list. You’ve got just one thing to manage: your choices, your will, your mind.
So mind it.”
Don’t Unintentionally Hand Over Your Freedom
“Instinctively, we protect your physical selves. We don’t let people touch us, push us around, control where we go. But when it comes to the mind, we’re less disciplined. We hand it over willingly to social media, to television, to what other people are doing, thinking, or saying. We sit down to work and the next thing you know, we’re browsing the Internet. We sit down with our families, but within minutes we have our phones out. We sit down peacefully in a park, but instead of looking inward, we’re judging people as they pass by.
We don’t even know that we’re doing this. We don’t realize how much waste is in it, how inefficient and distracted it makes us. And what’s worse – no one is making this happen. It’s totally self-inflicted.
To the Stoics, this is an abomination. They know that the world can control our bodies – we can be thrown in jail or be tossed about by the weather. But the mind? That’s ours. We must protect it. Maintain control over your mind and perceptions, they’d say. It’s your most prized possession.
Just Don’t Make Things Worse
“The first rule of holes, goes the adage, is that ‘if you find yourself in a hole, stop digging.’ This might be the most violated piece of commonsense advice in the world. Because what most of us do when something happens, goes wrong, or is inflicted on us is make it worse – first, by getting angry or feeling aggrieved, and next, by flailing around before we have much in the way of a plan.
Today, give yourself the most simple and doable of tasks: just don’t make stuff worse. Whatever happens, don’t add angry or negative emotions to the equation. Don’t react for the sake of reacting. Leave it as it is. Stop digging. Then plan your way out.”
Set the Standards and Use Them
“We go through our days responding and reacting, but it’s rare to really pause and ask: Is this thing I’m about to do consistent with what I believe? Or, better: Is this the kind of thing the person I would like to be should do?
The work of living is to set standards and then not compromise them. When you’re brushing your teeth, choosing your friends, losing your temper, falling in love, instructing your child, or walking your dog – all of these are opportunities.
Not, I want to do good – that’s an excuse. But, I will do good in this particular instance, right now. Set a standard; hold fast to it. That’s all there is.
Two Tasks
“You have two essential tasks in life:
to be a good person
and
to pursue the occupation that you love.
Everything else is a waste of energy and a squandering of your potential.
How does one do that? OK, that’s a tougher question. But the philosophy we see from the Stoics makes it simple enough:
say no to:
Distractions
Destructive emotions
Outside pressure.
Ask yourself:
What is that only I can do?
What is the best use of my limited time on this planet?
Try to do the right thing when the situation calls for it.
Treat other people the way you hope to be treated.
And understand that every small choice and tiny matter is an opportunity to practice those larger principles.
That’s it. That’s what goes into the most important skill of all: how to live. -
I bought this book in hopes to get a modern take of stoic philosophy. The book is intended to start on January 1st which is slightly distracting but that's neither here nor there. Each passage has a snippet of a classic stoic philosopher and a few paragraphs on how that particular snippet can be implemented in modern life.
I personally don't particularly see eye to eye with how the authors choose to implement the philosophy. Without getting to political, there is a typical "American" / neoliberal vibe with the modern implementations which I find ever so slightly grating. That being said, it's not too distracting albeit probably noticeable for those who might not be so fond of said vibe.
I'd recommend the book to those who might want to get a feel of stoicism or at least get a good idea of who the stoics were. I'd also recommend it for people who might be pressed for time but still have the desire to read something introspective daily (notably atheists / non-theists). -
Been reading this precious for a year now and maybe i have read this twice. This indeed gave me perspective to silence the anxiety of the uncertainty especially during the pandemic. I am grateful instead of a lot of things that i can accomplish even just to wake up, clean, read and prepare something to eat.
I still read this book daily for this year. You cannot really become by just reading a book once. -
Žinot tokias knygas, kurios kasdien tau pameta mintį, kad ją apmąstytum?
Paprastai jos sklando vienokio ar kitokio tikėjimo praktikoje, bandydamos nušviesti kelią sekėjmas. Yra puikių, aukščiausios prabos pavyzdžių – man bene geriausia žinomas atvejis Ignaco Lojolos pratybų įvairios interpretacijos.
Šita knyga iš tos serijos, gal tik žemesnio kalibro. Na bet užtat – geriau subalansuota sekuliariems žmonėms.
Ar siūlau skaityti? Kaip jaunimas sako, 6,53 iš 10.
Jau antri metai iš eilės su šia knyga ir jos audio įrašu pradedu dieną. Nauda įvairiapusė. Prisimenu stoikus. Pamąstau apie tai, kokia spalva ir mintimi nudažysiu dieną. Pasiklausau intelektualesnio angliško žodyno – skaito žavaus balso aktorius. 😉 Kartu su juo praktikuojuosi sudėtingesnių žodžių tarimą.
Jeigu esate stiprus filosofas ir rimtai domitės stoikais – geriau nevarkit. Ne jums.
Bet jeigu tiesiog norite po ranka turėti ne pernelyg banalų standartinių gyvenimo kelio ženklų rinkinį, tai voilà! kitaip sakant, "look there!" Ypač prisiminus, kad dauguma tokio žanro veikalų lėkšti iki tiek, kad juos galima užgerti viktorėlio vandenuku – smegenys struktūrizuosis, bet nepadėkos.
Knyga sudėliota į 365 trumpus pasakojimus (audio įrašas iki 10 min.): pradžioje vieno ar kito filosofo citata, po to autorių interpretacija (tokia lengvai moralizuojanti, jei ką). Tie dienos tekstukai savo ruožtu sujungti į mėnesio temą.
Va dabar jau 17-ta diena gyvenu sausyje, kurio tema Clarity (Aiškumas). Keturis pirmus mėnesius jungia bendra tema „Discipline of perception“ (Suvokimo drausmė).
Ar ateina tas žadamas aiškumas? Be abejo. Kasdien pamąstau, kaip puikiai moku išsisukti nuo svarbių darbų ir tarškėti apie tai, kas man miela. Bet tai juk ir yra gyvenimas, ar ne?
Taigi knyga, kuri ne stoikus įkvepia ginčams su savimi ir Zenonu Kitioniečiu, Seneka, Epiktetu ir net pačiu imperatoriumi Marku Aurelijumi.
Kompanija, kukliai vertinant, puiki. Ypač jeigu moki patylėti ir klausyti. -
A life changing book that I read a page a day. I'm now on my second loop.
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The collection of quotes is truly exceptional. However, I didn't like Ryan's writings accompanying them. Rooted in a Christian notion, with frequently referring back to American/European history that I didn't connect with, I found them odd. Even that could be excused had he focused on explaining what was meant to be conveyed in the quote. However, it is not so. Sometimes, Ryan's commentary seems to be completely random and out of sync with the Stoic sayings. Not to mention that one gets a totally different feel on reading the two together. While the Stoic sayings and quotes bring mental peace and tranquility, Ryan's anecdotes are often violent totally opposite to the sense conveyed in the quote.
Overall, a good book to get overall Stoic ideas arranged accordingly in topics such as courage, duty, practical mindedness, etc. Also, this prompts me to read Marcus Aurelius's Meditations, as the quotes from the book were indeed exceptional. -
"The greater the difficulty, the more glory in surmounting it. Skilful pilots gain their reputation from storms and tempests.”
Epictetus
(What about those who drown ...and sink?). Well, well,...keep serene. And keep a diary.
https://www.google.it/amp/s/amp.thegu...
(Be careful using BoJo's Stoic technique of negative visualisation)
We are all Stoics now... maybe:
https://asiatimes.com/2020/03/we-are-...
(And Taoists too??)
"We are waves of the same sea, leaves of the same tree, flowers of the same garden"
Seneca
Can the coronavirus pandemic change the way we think? One philosopher in Italy wonders:
https://theconversation.com/philosoph...
https://medium.com/stoicism-philosoph... -
I have to admit I wasn't reading this every day, I also started it in April, so I have missed a couple of months, I also skipped some days by just completely forgetting about this book, sometimes even weeks.
However, some of the quotes and analysis of them were quite relatable, sometimes even on the days I would read them. It's rather a flexible and open-minded approach, it is often fitting to your current situation, or one you once found yourself in, your experiences, etc.
Lots of them helped me get through the days, encouraged me to analyse how I felt, what went well and wrong, and how to make that particular day better and not make the same mistakes again.
Overall, I really enjoyed it, but as lazy as I am, I will probably not stick to the goal of reading it every day in 2018. -
I have read this book more or less with regard to the date as author originally intended – one piece of stoic wisdom per day. As one of the great stoic, Seneca, recommends – "Of all people only those are at leisure who make time for philosophy, only they truly live.", I tried to fill my days this year with some leisureliness by following the wisdom of Seneca, Epictetus, Marcus Aurelius, Musonius Rufus, and some other fellows from swollen times.
It is a very good idea by Ryan Holiday – a daily small dose of philosophy. In the book, each month has a theme, starting with Clarity in January and finishing with Meditation on Mortality in December, and then other important questions in other months.
The format of the book is simple. Each page has a citation by one of the philosophers, and there's a comment and interpretation by the author. A nice way to approach philosophy, it feels like you're having in a small discussion among three of us. Many comments by Ryan Holiday on stoic wisdom is even better than the original message, but some are just filling the page with words. Stoic insights are profound and at the same time very useful and practical. This book does a really great job in promoting it. It almost felt like a self-help book, but what can be a better shaper and advisor to our internal struggles than a good piece of philosophy? -
This started off promising. But the further I read, the more skeptical I became. And the skepticism was, at some point, accompanied by annoyance that ultimately escalated to the point of no return.
Ergo, DNF for two reasons.
First: I came to realize that stoicism just isn't for me right now. Maybe I would have been a believer 18 years ago, when I was a bright young thing majoring in philosophy because I believed that the answer to all problems -- mine, humanity's, the world's -- was rigorously accurate analysis. Now I'm officially almost an old person, and I'm trying to reprogram my mind so that it's better connected to my body. I need a holistic philosophy that embraces the wisdom of the body -- not one that idolizes some chimera called "rational choice" and denigrates "unreasoned passions."
Second: I couldn't make myself forget that the author is a marketing bro in his early 30s. And I couldn't stop noticing that all the role models cited in the book were white guys (come on). -
Make your life worth living, face your fear of death!
Pop culture likes to lead you to believe that if you set your mind to anything, you can achieve it.
But you don't need to live too long to realise you don't have complete control over circumstances. You may have prospered yesterday and yet experience a reversal today.
So what is the one thing that's completely in your control? Your mind. And because you control your mind, you control your choices.
Even so, the consequences of those choices are outside your control.
Practice Stoicism and start a lifelong journey of self-mastery. -
Ignore this drivel and go read the original source material. 85% of this book is quotes from the meditations of Marcus Aurelius. The author throws in banal commentary after each quote that sounds like something a college freshman would say. It's repetitive, unoriginal, and completely lacking in profundity. He could've just written,"yeah! What Marcus said!" and had the same effect. The only thing I learned from this book is that if I was smarter I'd be making money off derivative garbage like this bullshit con artist.
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One of the most important books in my life. I've just finished the last lesson and tomorrow Im going to start the book all over again. Plain, simple and powerful. I cannot relate to each lesson equally but I guess thats a personal thing, also it might change in time for any individual. I've also bought another copy of this book which I lend to my friends and family to try it out. Highly recommended.
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I have been reading a passage from this book each day (more or less) all year long. Each month’s worth of reading focuses on one aspect of Stoic philosophy, and each daily reading gives thoughts on that topic. Quotes from well-known Stoic philosophers start each passage for the day and then some text below that gives you something to think about and develop as you go through your day. It was an interesting year-long journey.