The Stoic’s Guide Podcast by Brad Young

Episode 27: The Journey Is the Destination: Stoic Lessons for Life's Path

43 min · 26 mei 2026
aflevering Episode 27: The Journey Is the Destination: Stoic Lessons for Life's Path artwork

Beschrijving

We live in a culture obsessed with arrival. With finishing. With checking the box, closing the chapter, and moving on to the next goal. From the time we are very young, we are trained to see life as a series of destinations — graduations, promotions, relationships reached, milestones crossed. The assumption embedded in this way of thinking is that the real thing, the valuable thing, the thing we are actually after, lies at the end of the road. The journey is merely a cost to be paid in order to get there. The Stoics thought differently. Not in a vague, inspirational-poster kind of way, but in a precisely reasoned, carefully argued kind of way that has practical implications for how you spend each day. Episode 27 of The Stoic's Guide is an extended meditation on that Stoic way of thinking — on what it means to inhabit your path fully, to find meaning not in arriving but in moving, and to discover that the life you are living right now, in all its incompleteness and uncertainty, is already the destination you have been looking for.

Reacties

0

Wees de eerste die een reactie plaatst

Meld je nu aan en word lid van de The Stoic’s Guide Podcast by Brad Young community!

Probeer gratis

Probeer 14 dagen gratis

€ 9,99 / maand na proefperiode. · Elk moment opzegbaar.

  • Podcasts die je alleen op Podimo hoort
  • 20 uur luisterboeken / maand
  • Gratis podcasts

Alle afleveringen

38 afleveringen

aflevering How the Hard Road Becomes the Path to Your Best Self artwork

How the Hard Road Becomes the Path to Your Best Self

Today we are going to talk about something that most people spend their entire lives running from. Obstacles. Not how to avoid them. Not how to survive them. But how to use them. How to let them shape you into the version of yourself you were always capable of becoming. Here is the truth that this episode is built on: the obstacle is not in your way. The obstacle is the way. And the person who understands that has access to a kind of personal power that most people never discover. We are going to go deep today. We are going to draw on the wisdom of the Stoics, look at the lives of real people who were forged by real difficulty, and by the end of this episode, I want you to see your struggles not as problems to be solved but as raw material to be used. Let us get into it.

Gisteren16 min
aflevering The Discipline to Win: Building Strength When No One Is Watching artwork

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.

5 jul 202612 min
aflevering Episode 33 The Role of Gratitude in Stoicism artwork

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 jun 202626 min