One of the most powerful ideas I ever heard (when I heard it first 35 years ago) is - "It isn't what people say to you or do that upsets you, it is how you chose to react.' Simple and almost a homily on the surface, but so often when people 'go off the rails' it is because they have been unable to hold this in mind.
Epictetus, in the first century A.D. wrote in the Enchiridion: “Men are disturbed not by things, but by the views which they take of them.” — Tom Storm
As a stoic, I have had many reasons for engaging in the life of a would be stoic. One of the more imperative reasons would be to attain a sense of inner calm. — Shawn
I may not have time as I'm under the pump at work (COVID emergencies, reports). The connection to CBT is clear and I studied Albert Ellis, who developed the foundations of this intervention based on some ideas from Stoicism (particularly Epictetus) and others. As REBT or Rational Emotive Behavioral Therapy. — Tom Storm
Modern-day stoicism is all about well-being, and well-being is not opposed to a proper (not deficient or excessive) sense of pride and dignity. Indeed, this really isn't rocket science. — praxis
Drop political correctness for a moment and try to envision yourself as a powerful member of a powerful tribe. Can you do it?
— baker
I’m not a powerful member of a powerful tribe, but I can fantasize that I am. Are you suggesting that ancient stoics were all a bunch of daydreamers?
That's in roundabout how the Stoic feels about himself, except that his reference frame isn't the powerful tribe, but Nature, the Divine.
— baker
Why would that be necessary to practice stoicism?
Sounds like something said by someone very powerful, someone on whom others depend for mercy. — baker
Sounds like something said by someone very powerful, someone on whom others depend for mercy.
— baker
That might be because it was said by someone very powerful... — Tom Storm
I'd love to see these modern-day stoics (and the old ones, too, actually) cope with some real problems, like poverty on the verge of homelessness or grave illness, or both. — baker
That's in roundabout how the Stoic feels about himself, except that his reference frame isn't the powerful tribe, but Nature, the Divine.
— baker
Why would that be necessary to practice stoicism?
— praxis
Because otherwise, you're just a poor sod in the gutter repeating some silly self-help soundbites to himself. — baker
But you understand Epictetus was a slave, right? Slaves generally weren't considered powerful men in the Roman Empire of the first century C.E. — Ciceronianus
That might be because it was said by someone very powerful... But you know what? It's been used powerfully with people who are homeless and on the margins for many years and it often transfers effortlessly to them. People who slash themselves with broken bottles and run into oncoming cars as a way to manage emotional distress can change using this approach. — Tom Storm
Does if work for everyone? Of course not. But it does for many.
Do any ideas work for everyone? — Tom Storm
The connection to CBT is clear and I studied Albert Ellis, who developed the foundations of this intervention based on some ideas from Stoicism (particularly Epictetus) and others. As REBT or Rational Emotive Behavioral Therapy. — Tom Storm
One of the most powerful ideas I ever heard (when I heard it first 35 years ago) is - "It isn't what people say to you or do that upsets you, it is how you chose to react.' Simple and almost a homily on the surface, but so often when people 'go off the rails' it is because they have been unable to hold this in mind.
Do any ideas work for everyone? — Tom Storm
Do any ideas work for everyone?
— Tom Storm
Why is that so? Surely you, given your profession, must have some explanation for it. You can't just chalk it up to Mercury retrograde. — baker
Somewhere at 12:30 he suddenly says SHIT-BRICKED, and this was beautiful in front of an academic audience.
— Shawn
:lol:
Short Story, surely.
So-called Shaky Stoics Shit-bricked on a Ship-wreck :cool: — Amity
We are natural stoics wrt the past. Good or bad, we take it as it went. — unenlightened
...as some authors would describe the stoic inner citadel of methodological reasonings of how to go about life to attain this state one has to present to themselves every day a sort of creed in practice. This creed affirm the needless effort to seek out inner peace as seen through the every day affirmations of Marcus Aurelius or Epictetus. — Shawn
1. the maxim - written down in notebooks ( enchiridions) and repeated until memorised. — Amity
At last. What took you so long ? :wink:I've come rather late to this thread, and may have missed something. — Ciceronianus
Surely slaves were ambitious? Or at least our particular slave here was.
But here's the catch: How many Stoics actually attained ataraxia, aequanimitas? — baker
At last. What took you so long ? :wink: — Amity
I'd love to see these modern-day stoics (and the old ones, too, actually) cope with some real problems, like poverty on the verge of homelessness or grave illness, or both. — baker
I'd love to see these modern-day stoics (and the old ones, too, actually) cope with some real problems, like poverty on the verge of homelessness or grave illness, or both.
— baker
I don’t see how your sadistic appetite is relevant to our little chat. — praxis
If we just look at the aspect of CBT, there is a large body of evidence that indicates it can be much more beneficial than silly self-help sound bites, even for gutter dwellers.
You’re not explaining your views so I’m assuming all this self-empowerment silliness amounts to nothing more than trolling.
Interesting how you choose to see this. My experience over 30 years suggests no contempt and good results. — Tom Storm
Do any ideas work for everyone?
— Tom Storm
Why is that so? Surely you, given your profession, must have some explanation for it. You can't just chalk it up to Mercury retrograde.
— baker
People don't always have explanations. But I do know that if someone has significant brain damage (which is very common in people with trauma histories - injuries/suicide attempts/overdoses) they may not be able to participate for reason of memory, and diminished capacity (for want of a better term).
Do you think that CBT or REBT would work on someone like Prince Siddhattha? I think it wouldn't. Would you say the reason would be that he had some kind of brain damage? — baker
You and your three monkeys again. — baker
Gary Cooper would never be cynical as you sometimes appear to be. Maybe you need to turn in your little tin sheriff's badge and be the deputy instead. — Tom Storm
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