The Stoic’s Guide Podcast by Brad Young

Chapter 28 Finding Peace Amid Chaos — The Power of Perspective in Hard Times

19 min · 30. Mai 2026
Episode Chapter 28 Finding Peace Amid Chaos — The Power of Perspective in Hard Times Cover

Beschreibung

This episode is a quiet invitation — not a lecture, not a list of instructions, but a slow walk through some of the most enduring ideas ever recorded about the human experience. Today we are sitting with a single, profound question: how do we find peace when the world around us refuses to be still? The Stoics had much to say about this, and their answers are as relevant now as they were two thousand years ago. Before we step into the ideas themselves, it is worth pausing to understand the people who gave us this philosophy. Stoicism was not born in a quiet garden among the privileged. It was forged in the friction of real life. Zeno of Citium, the founder of Stoic philosophy, reportedly began his philosophical journey after a shipwreck left him stranded and stripped of almost everything he owned. He walked into a bookshop in Athens, read the words of Socrates, and decided that wisdom was worth pursuing above all else.

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37 Folgen

Episode The Discipline to Win: Building Strength When No One Is Watching Cover

The Discipline to Win: Building Strength When No One Is Watching

Marcus Aurelius was the most powerful man in the world. He was the emperor of Rome. He could have done anything he wanted. He could have indulged in every pleasure imaginable, and nobody could have stopped him. And yet, every night, this man sat down and wrote private notes to himself about how to be better. He never meant for anyone to read them. We only have his journal today, the book we call Meditations, by accident. He wrote it for an audience of one. Himself. Think about that. The most powerful man alive was disciplining himself in private, with no audience, no applause, no reason except that he believed it was the right way to live. That's the heart of it right there. Discipline isn't about looking good. It's about being good when it costs you something and no one is keeping score.

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Episode Episode 33 The Role of Gratitude in Stoicism Cover

Episode 33 The Role of Gratitude in Stoicism

Gratitude is one of the most talked-about ideas in contemporary self-help, and yet most people practice it in a way that is surprisingly shallow — a list of three things each morning, dutifully written and quickly forgotten. There is nothing wrong with such lists, but they tend to function more as positive-thinking exercises than as genuine transformations of perspective. The Stoic understanding of gratitude is something older, deeper, and considerably more demanding. It does not begin with blessings. It begins with mortality. This episode explores what gratitude actually meant to the Stoic philosophers, why they considered it one of the highest expressions of wisdom, and how their approach to thankfulness can give your own practice a weight and a staying power that the lighter versions simply cannot match. When you understand gratitude the way the Stoics understood it, it becomes less of a mood and more of a discipline — less of a feeling you wait for and more of a perspective you choose.

25. Juni 202626 min
Episode Episode 32 Building Daily Rituals for a Stoic Lifestyle Cover

Episode 32 Building Daily Rituals for a Stoic Lifestyle

There is something quietly powerful about a life built around intentional habits. Most people move through their days on a kind of autopilot — reacting to whatever arrives first, whether that is the noise of a phone, the demands of others, or the scattered pull of their own unexamined impulses. The Stoics understood this danger well. They believed that the shape of a day reveals the shape of a life, and that if you want to become a certain kind of person, you must first become deliberate about how you begin, how you proceed, and how you close each day. This episode is about the practice of building daily rituals grounded in Stoic philosophy. Not rigid schedules or complicated systems, but simple, repeatable acts of attention that anchor you to what matters. Rituals, in the Stoic sense, are not ceremonies. They are commitments to show up to your own life with full awareness. They are the quiet scaffolding that holds a thoughtful existence together.

20. Juni 202623 min