The Stoic’s Guide Podcast by Brad Young

Episode 29 Finding Peace Amid Chaos — The Power of Perspective in Hard Times Part 2

15 min · 5. juni 2026
episode Episode 29 Finding Peace Amid Chaos — The Power of Perspective in Hard Times Part 2 cover

Description

The Role of Daily Reflection The Stoics were not content with philosophy as a set of ideas to be understood and then stored on a shelf. They were intensely practical, and they designed practices to ensure that these principles were lived, not just known. One of the most consistent of these practices was daily reflection — what we might now call journaling, though for the Stoics it was less about emotional processing and more about moral inventory. Seneca, the Roman statesman and Stoic philosopher, wrote extensively about his nightly practice of reviewing the day. Each evening, before sleep, he would ask himself a series of quiet questions. What did I do well today? Where did I fall short? Was I ruled by anxiety, anger, or vanity at any point? Did I treat the people around me with the care and fairness they deserved? Did I spend my energy on things within my control, or did I exhaust myself fighting the wind? These were not questions asked in a spirit of self-punishment. Seneca was clear that the aim was not to condemn yourself but to understand yourself — and through understanding, to improve. He wrote that the examined life produces a kind of inner order that the unexamined life cannot reach. When you spend even a few minutes at the end of each day sitting honestly with your choices, you begin to notice patterns. You begin to see the recurring triggers, the habitual reactions, the places where your philosophy and your behavior have not yet met.

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37 episodes

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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 artwork

Episode 33 The Role of Gratitude in Stoicism

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episode Episode 32 Building Daily Rituals for a Stoic Lifestyle artwork

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.

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