Showing posts with label Marcus Aurelius. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marcus Aurelius. Show all posts

Monday, March 9, 2026

LIAM OUT LOUD: So learn to be thankful for enemies rather than perplexed or angered by them.


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If you find yourself feeling annoyed, angry, or impatient with the world or the people in it, I have some advice worth taking seriously.  Negative emotions are almost always the result of reality failing to meet our expectations.  You have no control over the world or the people in it. Most people barely have control over themselves.  That leaves only one variable that you can govern reasonably: your expectations.  

Marcus Aurelius understood this well.  He advised beginning each morning by reminding yourself that you'll encounter the busybody, the ungrateful, arrogant, deceitful, envious, and unsocial.  Once you accept this frame, once you accept that undesirable people exist and always will, you stop feeling shocked or personally wronged when you encounter them.  Go a step further, and admit that parts of you are undesirable as well and the reaction softens more.  You're no longer offended.  You are simply meeting expectations.  At that point, irritation gives way to something more useful, gratitude even.  Why wouldn't you want to learn from someone else's mistakes instead of paying the full cost of making them yourself?  With this mindset, angry, bitter, resentful, lazy, and ignorant people you encounter are no longer obstacles that you failed to avoid.  They become walking lessons.  The wise man encounters a fool and improves himself.  The fool encounters a fool and acts foolishly.  There may even be something shameful in allowing such people to unsettle us.  As Epictetus put it, if someone were to hand your body over to a stranger, you would be outraged; yet you think nothing of handing over your mind to anyone who provokes you allowing it to be disturbed and confused. So learn to be thankful for enemies rather than perplexed or angered by them.  Used properly, they become fuel for self-improvement.  Used poorly, they drag you down into the same resentment that consumes them. 

Thursday, March 5, 2026

SAMA HOOLE: Marcus Aurelius on complaint: "Loss is nothing else but change, and change is Nature's delight." Seneca: "A gem cannot be polished without friction, nor a man perfected without trials."

Marcus Aurelius on complaint: "Loss is nothing else but change, and change is Nature's delight." Seneca: "A gem cannot be polished without friction, nor a man perfected without trials." Epictetus: "It's not what happens to you, but how you react to it that matters." The Stoics were not, to be clear, against acknowledging difficulty. They were not repression advocates. They were not telling you to smile through pain. They were pointing out that complaint, particularly the abstract, generalised, habitual complaint about circumstances beyond your control, does not change the circumstances. It changes you. It makes you worse at dealing with the circumstances. It trains the nervous system to treat hardship as catastrophe. It keeps the wound open. Doris walked into the bog four times. She extracted herself four times. Each time: assessed the bog, concluded the bog started it, returned to grazing. No ongoing narrative about the bog. No identity built around having been a sheep that went in the bog. No story she tells other sheep. Just: went in the bog. Came out. Moved on. The bog is the bog's problem. The bog did not define Doris. Most of the things you think are defining you aren't. They're just bogs.

Come out of them and graze.