Curated from: forge.medium.com
Ideas, facts & insights covering these topics:
13 ideas
·650 reads
6
Explore the World's Best Ideas
Join today and uncover 100+ curated journeys from 50+ topics. Unlock access to our mobile app with extensive features.
“When the standards have been set,” Epictetus said, “the work of philosophy is just this, to examine and uphold the standards, but the work of a truly good person is in using those standards when they know them.”
Pretty straightforward then: Define your rules. Live by them.
In studying their writings for my own practice, I’ve compiled 50 rules from the Stoics, gathered from their immense body of work across two thousand years. These rules functioned, then, as they do now, as guides to what the ancients called “the good life.” Hopefully some of them will illuminate your own path.
21
86 reads
1. Focus on what you can control.
2. You control how you respond to things.
3. Ask yourself, “Is this essential?”
5. Value time more than money and possessions.
23
70 reads
6. You are the product of your habits .
7. Remember you have the power to have no opinion.
8. Own the morning.
9. Put yourself up for review. Interrogate yourself.
22
61 reads
10. Don’t suffer imagined troubles.
11. Try to see the good in people.
12. Never be overheard complaining—even to yourself.
13. Two ears, one mouth for a reason .
22
53 reads
22. Define what success means to you.
23. Find a way to love everything that happens .
24. Seek out challenges.
25. Don’t follow the mob.
22
45 reads
39. To do wrong to one, is to do wrong to yourself.
40. Always choose “alive time.”
37. Prepare for life’s inevitable setbacks.
38. Look for the poetry in ordinary things.
22
40 reads
45. Don’t make your problems worse by bemoaning them.
46. Accept success without arrogance, handle failure with indifference.
47. Courage. Temperance. Justice. Wisdom. (Always).
48. The obstacle is the way.
23
35 reads
49. Ego is the enemy.
50. Stillness is the key.
I’ll leave you with the one rule that captures all the rules. It comes from Epictetus: “Don’t explain your philosophy. Embody it.”
Don’t talk about it, be about it. The whole point of Stoicism is what you do. It’s who you are. It’s the act of virtue, not the act of talking about virtue. Or reading about it. Or writing about it. It’s about embodying your rules and principles. Letting your actions speak for you. So, Marcus Aurelius reminded himself and now us, “Waste no more time talking about what a good man is like. Be one.”
23
36 reads
IDEAS CURATED BY
Learn more about personaldevelopment with this collection
Basic survival skills
How to prioritize needs in survival situations
How to adapt to extreme situations
Related collections
Similar ideas
4 ideas
Stoicism: Practical Philosophy You Can Actually Use
ryanholiday.net
15 ideas
12 ideas
Stoicism in a Nutshell: A (Better?) Path to Inner Strength and Resilience
twintreeproject.com
Read & Learn
20x Faster
without
deepstash
with
deepstash
with
deepstash
Personalized microlearning
—
100+ Learning Journeys
—
Access to 200,000+ ideas
—
Access to the mobile app
—
Unlimited idea saving
—
—
Unlimited history
—
—
Unlimited listening to ideas
—
—
Downloading & offline access
—
—
Supercharge your mind with one idea per day
Enter your email and spend 1 minute every day to learn something new.
I agree to receive email updates