title Empower Yourself with This | Why You Need to Get In the Arena

description We all have those days where we’d rather just not. Days where we’d rather not deal with that annoying co-worker or petty family member. Days where we’d rather not bother with all the work we have to do, all the responsibilities we have to manage. The ancients knew days like this.

Reading Marcus Aurelius can change your life, but only if you know how to read his work 👉 Head here now to grab your Meditations book and guide bundle | https://store.dailystoic.com/pages/meditations-month-2026

📚 Books Mentioned:
Meditations
River of Doubt by Candice Millard
The Rise of Theodore Roosevelt by Edmund Morris
Mornings on Horseback by David McCullough
The Bully Pulpit by Doris Kearns Goodwin
Discipline is Destiny by Ryan Holiday
The Obstacle Is the Way by Ryan Holiday

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pubDate Thu, 23 Apr 2026 07:00:00 GMT

author Daily Stoic | Backyard Ventures

duration 776000

transcript

Speaker 1:
[00:00] Welcome to The Daily Stoic Podcast, designed to help bring those four key stoic virtues, courage, discipline, justice and wisdom into the real world. It's the most empowering thing. We all have those days when we'd rather just not. Days when we'd rather not deal with an annoying coworker or a petty family member. Days when we'd rather not bother with all the work we have to do, all the responsibilities we have to manage. Days where the awfulness and corruption of the world gets to us, and we'd rather just not get out of bed that day. Marcus Aurelius and all the stoics, of course, knew days like this. Life was one thing after another for them too. Think of Marcus Aurelius' life. We have a plague, we have famine, we have backstabbing, we have wars. He does not meet with the good fortune he deserved, one ancient historian noted, as his whole reign was a series of troubles. It would have been easy for him to give up trying to retreat into luxury or pleasure. It would have been easy for him to allow the indelible stain of power to ruin him, as it had for so many emperors before him. Yet within the pages of Meditations, we witness Marcus Aurelius doing something very different. We see him fighting to be the person philosophy tried to make him. No role is so well suited to philosophy as the one you are in right now, he writes in Meditations. He was saying that we don't just talk about philosophy. We have to apply it to our daily lives, whatever profession and place we happen to occupy. And that's why if you're interested in Stoic philosophy or philosophy in general, Meditations by Marcus Aurelius is the first thing to read, according to Arthur Brooks, when he came on the Daily Stoic Podcast. It's the most empowering thing I've ever read, he said, especially since I read it when I was young. He said, it's always been incredibly important to me. And the reason that he and thousands of other people say this is because in Meditations, Marcus is showing us that it doesn't matter how rich or powerful or famous we are, that life will still include pain and suffering, life will still throw obstacles that seem difficult at us. What matters is how we respond to those things. We shouldn't assume that something is impossible because we find it hard, Marcus writes in Meditations, but recognize that if it's humanly possible, you can do it too. And it's ideas like this that explain why Meditations has been this sort of secret of leaders and ordinary people for almost 2,000 years. That people, whether they're military leaders or students or entrepreneurs or artists or stay-at-home parents or championship athletes, they've turned to Meditations for guidance. And it's why for over a decade here at Daily Stoic, for almost 20 years in my life, I've been trying to make this work accessible to people. And it's why we're doing Meditations Month here at Daily Stoic, in honor of Marcus' birthday. We're doing this deep dive into Meditations, what it means. We put together this really cool sort of guide book club that we're all doing together. We're doing a Q&A about it. It's free for anyone who grabs the guide. Plus, we've got the Leatherbound edition of Meditations. Meditations Month has been awesome. I'll link to that in today's show notes, or you can just go to dailystoic.com/meditations to get the bundles of all that stuff I was just talking about, or just go to your local library and grab a copy. I don't care. Just bring Marcus into your life. It's one of the most important and empowering decisions you will ever make. It all comes down to hiring. You gotta find the right people for your team, and you gotta bring them on board, and you gotta onboard them quickly. Just throwing up a job post and hoping you get lucky. I've just found, well, you don't get lucky enough. If you wanna find quality hires, well, you should check out Indeed right now. People are finding quality hires on Indeed right now. In just the 30 or so seconds we've already been talking, people have made dozens of hires on Indeed, according to Indeed data worldwide. Their sponsored jobs posted directly on Indeed are 95% more likely to report a hire than a non-sponsored job. So join more than 3.3 million employers worldwide that use Indeed to connect with quality talent that fits their needs. Spend less time searching and more time actually interviewing candidates who check all your boxes, less time, less stress, more results. When you need the right person to cut through the chaos, this is a job for Indeed Sponsored Jobs. Listeners of this show, get a $75 sponsored job credit to help get your job, the premium status it deserves at indeed.com/stoic. That's indeed.com/stoic right now. Support the show by saying you heard about it on this podcast, indeed.com/stoic, terms and conditions apply. We just got home from a spring break trip, 12 hours of driving, we're pulling into the driveway, and we're like, oh man, what are we going to have for dinner tonight? What are we going to have for dinner for tomorrow? Because we don't have time to go to the grocery store. But then we remembered, we had a HelloFresh box delivered while we were gone. We had someone put it in the fridge. That took care of everything, because HelloFresh makes cooking effortlessly. So you can always look forward to a homemade meal. And with HelloFresh, no two meals will ever be the same. You can choose from 80 plus global recipes every month, Vietnamese, Moroccan, Caribbean and more. You can try unique ingredients. They're all pre-proportioned for you. You don't have to be a five-star chef to make dinner taste great. The recipes are easy to follow. They don't require fancy equipment. And again, all the ingredients are right there. Go to hellofresh.com/stoic10fm to get 10 free meals plus a free NutriBullet Ultra. That's their compact kitchen system. It's almost a $200 value on your third box. Free meals applied as a discount on the first box. New subscribers only. Priorities by plan must order the third box by May 31st, 2026. Hey, it's Ryan. Welcome to another episode of The Daily Stoic Podcast. You know about Marcus Aurelius' Meditations? Well, at one point in my life, I didn't. And it was a fateful book recommendation that turned me on to the Stoics. And I still have my Amazon receipt from October something or other, 2006, when I bought Marcus Aurelius' Meditations and also a biography of Theodore Roosevelt, The Rise of Theodore Roosevelt by Edmund Morris, one of my all-time favorite biographies we carried at the Painter Porch. It's a lovely book. And it started my journey down two different rabbit holes. It turned out, discovering much later in that rabbit hole, that they connected at some point, that the rabbit holes intersected. And that's actually queues up what we're going to talk about in today's episode. Because today, on this day, 116 years ago, Theodore Roosevelt delivered his famous Citizen in a Republic speech in Paris. Maybe you don't know that name. You're like, what famous speech is that? This is what we in America refer to as the Man in the Arena speech. That's the passage that is most well known, where he talks about how what matters isn't the critic on the sidelines, the person who is willing to step into the arena and try. I guess that metaphor is particularly apt here at Daily Stoic where we talk about the Coliseum, we talk about gladiators. Marcus Aurelius was literally and figuratively in the arena. He was seen sometimes writing. He may well have written Meditations while the gladiators fought in the Coliseum below. His son Commodus takes the wrong lesson from this and desperately wants to fight in the arena. It doesn't understand it as more of a metaphor. Of course, Marcus Aurelius' works have a bunch of gladiatorial metaphors in them. One of my favorites that we talk about every New Year is the idea of being like the gladiator who's torn to pieces at the games, begging to be held over, to be spared, and to fight again. Marcus Aurelius was famous for dragging, we're told by one ancient historian, his philosophy teacher, Rusticus, away from his books and into the real world. That he wasn't content to allow them to be a pen and ink philosopher. Basically, he was saying exactly what Roosevelt was saying. He dragged them into the arena, turned them into participants in public life, had them hold public office, had them hold administrative power and responsibility. That's really what the arena speech is about. It's not just like, oh, screw you to the critics. It's about saying go be involved, go do something. Don't just talk about it, be about it. Okay, so what is today's episode? Where does Theodore Roosevelt and the Stoics actually convert? Well, did you know that Theodore Roosevelt took a copy of Epictetus with him on his famous River of Doubt expedition? Another lovely book, A River of Doubt by Candice Millard, who I rave about, I love that book. The copy had been lent to him by a guy named Major Shipton. There's a handful of people who were big readers, whose books I would love to flip through. Patent books I'd love to see through. I'd love to see Marcus Aurelius' copy of Epictetus. I'd definitely love to see Theodore Roosevelt's copy of Epictetus. You can actually see a copy of this book on the website of the Theodore Roosevelt Center where he's noting that who gave him the book and that he took it with him. I would love to hold this book in my hands. What did he underline? What stood out to him? Did it get damaged? Was it wet? What pages seemed to be the most warm? Anyways, in honor of the speech's anniversary today, I thought I would share a passage from the speech, which I read. I read it for something else, which you'll be able to hear my small contribution to at a later date. But here is me reading that famous speech. It is not the critic who counts, not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood, who strives valiantly, who errs, who comes up short again and again, because there is no effort without error and shortcoming, but who does actually strive to do the deeds, who knows great enthusiasms, the great devotions, who spends himself in a worthy cause, who at the best knows in the end the triumph of high achievement, and who at the worst, if he fails, at least fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who know neither victory nor defeat. It is not the critic who counts, not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood, who strives valiantly, who errs, who comes short again and again, because there is no effort without error and shortcoming. But who does actually strive to do the deeds, who knows great enthusiasms, the great devotions, who spends himself in a worthy cause, who at the best knows in the end the triumph of high achievement, and who at the worst, if he fails, at least fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who know neither victory nor defeat. Anyways, as I wrap this up, I deeply admire Roosevelt. He was not a perfect figure. He was a problematic figure in some ways. You get that when you read these big biographies. You see them fully for who they are. But I wrote about him a bunch. Actually, I wrote about him obstacles away. And then I wrote about him, Indiscipline is Destiny. But as I wrap up, I want to tell that story, which I first read in Edmund Morris' book on Theodore Roosevelt. So here is a little riff on the idea of discipline as being the promises you make to yourself. It's a famous story. It appears in all the great biographies of Theodore Roosevelt. Two of my favorites are The Rise of Theodore Roosevelt by Edmund Morris and Mornings on Horseback by David McCullough. It appears in Discipline is Destiny and The Obstacle Is The Way. A young asthmatic Teddy, smart but frail, is approached by his father who tells him that although the boy has brains, he hasn't got the body, hasn't got the strength to make good on his intellectual gifts. I'll make my body, Roosevelt said in response and proceeded to lift weights, hike mountains, ride horses, wrestle, box, swim laps and even learn judo. But there's another perspective on this story that we often glide over, it was Teddy's sister, Corrine, who witnessed the exchange between father and son. What struck her about it years later, she said, was that this was her brother's first important promise to himself. Watching him work out in the gym and on the porch of their brownstone, she was watching him fulfill that promise, keeping it to himself. That's what the virtue of discipline is about. Self-discipline is about the promises you keep with yourself. It's not just the physical ones. It's about doing what you say and not doing what you say you won't. The decision to wake up early, the decision not to reach for the bottle, the decision to show up on time, the decision to push yourself a little further, even though your body aches, the decision not to procrastinate, the decision to do your best. We all make promises to ourselves, set goals, set standards, make plans. We don't all keep them. I hope you enjoyed this little Theodore Roosevelt-themed episode. And again, what the Stoics want us to do is step into the arena. Again, literally and figuratively be involved. And so I recommend both The Rise of Theodore Roosevelt, Mornings on Horseback by David McCullough is lovely. I love The Bully Pulpit by Doris Kearns Goodwin. And then of course, The River of Doubt by Candice Millard. All of those you can grab at the Painted Porch. Let's go.