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Saturday, September 17, 2022
Your Saturday Stoic Review — Week of September 12 - 18
PASSAGE OF THE WEEK:
Greatness, happiness, contentment…these things are what life can be. But only if we choose to experience them. Only if we slow down. Only if we show up and stay, in the moment.
"What I love about Discipline is Destiny is the deep, fearless dive Ryan takes into a subject that others almost always treat on the superficial level."
— Steven Pressfield
If you haven't yet ordered a copy of Ryan Holiday's much-anticipated Discipline is Destiny: The Power of Self-Control, head over to dailystoic.com/preorder.
"It's good to have high standards. But…it's called self-discipline for a reason. Meaning, it's about you. You don't get to enforce your standards on other people. This is why Marcus Aurelius talks about being strict with yourself and tolerant with others. Cato says, 'I can forgive anyone's errors but my own.'"
On a recent episode of the Daily Stoic podcast, Ryan Holiday talked to KIND Snacks Founder Daniel Lubetzky. The two talked about Lubetzky's unique path to success, the values that shape a great company culture, the many ways to measure success, and the importance of one's day to day behaviors:
"How you behave in every single interaction with yourself and with other human beings is ultimately who you are…I used to think, just a few years ago, that where you're headed, what you achieve, arriving at some destination—that these were how you measure who you are. But the truth is—the more I've thought about it, the more I've observed it—far, far more important is how you're acting at every moment."
"It's impossible to teach your child everything they need to know to thrive in an unpredictable world. But when you focus on reading, you can rest assured that you're building the skill that supports all others. It truly facilitates learning in every other area of life—academically and personally, as workers and as citizens—and is the undisputed best tool to help kids meet the demands of adulthood. It's also a powerful bridge to the best of public life."
Cicero and Cato both refused to take bribes, despite how widespread the practice was for politicians at the time. Cato refused to be enriched by his office in any form, even though that was even more common. Marcus Aurelius refused inheritances that were offered to him, much the same way.
Although they never gave us their exact reasons, it's pretty easy to deduce. Because corruption is a betrayal of the public trust. Even if it weren't, Marcus and Cato would likely have declined all the same. Why? Because to accept the money would have been to sacrifice their autonomy.
They lived along the same principle so brilliantly expressed, thousands of years later, by the photographer Bill Cunningham: "If you don't take money, they can't tell you what to do, kid." Remember: "Money's the cheapest thing. Liberty, freedom is the most expensive."
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