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Practical Stoicism

Why Stoicism Teaches Us to Be Prepared for Death (Meditations 3.8)

Practical Stoicism

Evergreen Podcasts

Philosophy, Society & Culture

4.8 • 662 Ratings

🗓️ 18 February 2025

⏱️ 19 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this episode, I explore Meditations 3.8 and the idea of preparing for death—not as a morbid fascination, but as a necessary step toward living justly and without fear. Marcus Aurelius describes the Stoic sage as someone unshaken by fate, someone who meets the end of life without hesitation or regret. But how does this apply to the rest of us, who are still progressing in our practice? “In the understanding of a man of chastened and purified spirit you will find, no trace of festering wound, no ulceration, no abscess beneath the skin. The hour of fate does not surprise his life before its fulfilment, so that one would say that the actor is leaving the stage before he has fulfilled his role, before the play is over. You will find nothing servile or artificial, no dependence on others nor severance from them; nothing to account for, nothing that needs a hole to hide in.” -- Meditations 3.8 A core theme in this meditation is the relationship between fear and duty. If we allow fear—whether of death, judgment, or hardship—to dictate our choices, we risk abandoning our roles and responsibilities. Through a firefighter analogy, I break down how Stoicism teaches us to act justly by focusing on our roles rather than potential consequences. The takeaway? True Stoic practice isn’t about becoming fearless but about ensuring that fear never prevents us from acting in alignment with Virtue. Key Takeaways: • Marcus Aurelius is speaking about the Stoic sage, not the Prokoptôn. • Fear of death impairs our ability to act justly and fulfill our roles. • Stoicism does not glorify suffering—it values resilience and moral clarity. • Stoics are not indifferent to life, but they recognize it as an indifferent in the pursuit of Virtue. • The ancient Stoics believed sagehood was theoretically possible, but practically, it remains an unreachable ideal. Ultimately, this meditation reminds us that shedding fear—especially fear of death—frees us to serve others and pursue Virtue without hesitation. Join The Society of Stoics Want to deepen your understanding of Stoicism in a private community? Join The Society of Stoics for $10/month: https://community.stoicismpod.com Resources & Links • Purchase a copy of my book: https://stoicismpod.com/book • Read the source text used: https://stoicismpod.com/far • Follow me on Bluesky: https://stoicismpod.com/bluesky Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

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T's and Cs apply.

1:18.8

Welcome to the United States and Cs apply. Welcome back for Kapton. Glad you're here for another episode of practical stoicism.

1:25.6

This week I was tempted to skip a meditation because Marcus is in this week's meditation, again, talking about death.

1:29.0

And no matter how valuable the lessons each and every one of these meditations convey, at least in my opinion, it is easy to get burned out when they all

1:33.8

boil down to the same five or six things when looked at from a big picture vantage point. But

1:39.7

still, I feel there is value to be missed in the details of this meditation, so in the end, I decided not to skip it, which, of course, you know, because we're listening to an episode that has Meditations 3.8 in the title.

1:53.1

So we're going to talk about death as a topic one more time, because in this meditation, it's not death specifically, or at least so much, as it is the preparedness for death

2:03.3

that is up for discussion. By the way, some of you have reached out to me because you've gone to

2:08.2

Stoicismpod.com forward slash members in order to gain access to an ad-free version of this podcast,

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