4.6 • 4.7K Ratings
🗓️ 30 August 2018
⏱️ 3 minutes
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0:00.0 | Hey, prime members, you can listen to the Daily Stoke Podcast early and add free on Amazon music. Download the app today. |
0:13.6 | Welcome to the Daily Stoke. For each day, we read a short passage designed to help you cultivate the strength, insight, wisdom necessary for living the good life. |
0:23.3 | Each one of these passages is based on the 2000-year-old philosophy that has guided some of history's greatest men and women. For more, you can visit us at DailyStoic.com. |
0:37.3 | This is the only thing that matters in life. In 1940, while he was struggling as an undergraduate at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Walker Percy wrote to his uncle and adopted father, William Alexander Percy, |
0:52.3 | to give him the news about his grades. William Alexander, who had introduced his young ward to the writings of Marcus Aurelius and himself had gone to Harvard, did not care for one second about the grades. |
1:05.3 | As he wrote back to Walker, my whole theory about life is that glory and accomplishment are of far less importance than the creation of character and individual good life. |
1:17.3 | How lucky we might have been to get that lesson from our own parents at that impressionable age, to hear emphatically that marks on a report card are not a reflection of who we are and that their recognition such a hollow thing. |
1:31.3 | Because it's clear that most of us have internalized the exact opposite. We think that fame and fortune are the marks of a good person. We connect them like cause and effect. |
1:41.3 | If then statements in the logic of human existence, we chase these things because like grades, they are quantifiable and easy to game. |
1:50.3 | But character, the trait the Stoics believed was like fate, the determining factor in life, well that we mostly ignore. We assume it will take care of itself. |
2:00.3 | It won't. If we directed half the time we spend trying to advance our careers or asin the test towards our own individual moral improvement, the world would be transformed and so would our individual lives. |
2:14.3 | Good, lies. |
2:16.3 | Hey, prime members, you can listen to the daily Stoic early and ad free on Amazon music. Download the Amazon music app today or you can listen early and add free with Wondering Plus in Apple podcasts. |
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