1/31/2023

On Our Final Journey On the "Virtual Route 66" For January 2023: #RandomThoughts Courtesy Ryan Holiday

 

The Son by Philipp Meyer

I picked this up by chance at a bookstore in Florida. How I hadn’t heard about it before, I don’t know because it’s partly set in Bastrop where I live and where my bookstore, The Painted Porch, is. It’s one of the greatest epic Westerns I’ve ever read. It predates and is better than Yellowstone, with similar Shakespearen family drama. It also has shades of East of Eden (a must read) and a good dash of one of my absolute favorite narrative nonfiction titles, Empire of the Summer Moon. If you’re looking for a novel to start the year off, I loved this book.

Molly’s Game: The True Story of the 26-Year-Old Woman Behind the Most Exclusive, High-Stakes Underground Poker Game in the World by Molly Bloom

I was supposed to have Molly at the bookstore to do an in-person interview for the podcast back in early 2022. We bought a bunch of books that she was going to sign, they sold out, and then it turned out she needed to reschedule. We ended up doing the interview over Zoom a couple weeks ago (which you can listen to here), so I just recently got around to reading the book and watching the movie. What I found inspiring about Molly’s story is what Aaron Sorkin did as well: her unique code of ethics inside an unethical world. She ran a high-stakes poker game with some of the richest and most famous people in the world. Even when she was in dire financial straits, even when she was offered millions of dollars to reveal the identities and the gossip of these poker games, even when the wrong thing would have been easier, she didn’t. It’s fascinating. I also related to Molly’s story because I too was sucked into a strange world in my twenties. A great related book is The Harder The Fall by Budd Schulberg, one of my all time favorite books (I talk about it more in this video).

The Expanding Circle by Peter Singer

Even though Stoicism is a ruggedly individual philosophy, at the core of it is this idea of “the circles of concern.” Our first concern, the Stoics said, is ourselves. Then our family, our community, our country, our world, all living things. The work of philosophy is to draw these concerns inward—to learn to care about as many people as possible, to do as much good as possible. When I had Peter Singer on the podcast, he mentioned this book. He chanced on a similar metaphor, not knowing its Stoic origins. I ended up getting The Expanding Circle, about expanding our focus on the welfare of family and friends to include, ultimately, all of humanity—animals, the environment, all of it.

Government Cheese by Steven Pressfield

Another Steven Pressfield book for me to rave about. Steven is a mentor, someone whose work has changed my life in so many ways, and just one of my all time favorite people. He was in Austin not too long ago and while he was in town, we recorded an awesome podcast while on an impromptu walk along Town Lake in downtown Austin. If you like The War of Art—which, as I’ve said before, is a book I read before starting any creative project—Government Cheese is the stories in between the lessons that make that book so good. He’s lived a hell of a life—he had twenty-one jobs in eleven states, and it took him almost thirty years to publish his first book. Steven signed a bunch of copies of Turning Pro and Gates of Fire while he was in town which are absolutely worth having.

The Club by Leo Damrosch

The idea of masterminds—groups of people who get together and help each other along their creative pursuits—are popular now. I’m in a couple of these types of groups myself. But one could say that the original mastermind goes back to the early 1760s when the painter Joshua Reynolds assembled a group—Samuel Johnson, Adam Smith, Edmund Burke, Edward Gibbon, and James Boswell—at the Turk’s Head Tavern in London. Some of the smartest people in the world, getting together to talk philosophy, art, life. I loved this book and took tons of notes. It’s basically a set of miniature biographies of a bunch of people worth knowing.

The Creative Act by Rick Rubin

There is perhaps no one better qualified than Rick Rubin to help people tap into their creativity. I think it will quickly become one of those The War of Art type of books—one that artists keep close by and return to routinely. I wrote quite a bit about Rubin in Perennial Seller and no doubt would have sourced from this book if it had existed back then. But my basic summary of this book is: Instead of trying to be creative, try to get an environment/a mindset/a practice that is conducive to creativity and let things happen. It’s like Zen in the Art of Archery. You let the arrow fall like ripe fruit.

Misc.

I read Joan Didion: The Last Interview, a collection of interviews with Joan that I really enjoyed. I went back through and did my notes on The Outlier: The Unfinished Presidency of Jimmy Carter and was struck again by what a fascinating figure Carter was. He is one of the great American presidents to read about, and if you want to read more I also recommend His Very Best. My wife really enjoyed Tunnel 29 about a tunnel being built under the Berlin Wall during the Cold War. I forgot my book at the office and picked up my old copy of Bright Lights, Big City—one of the only good books written in second person—and re-read it. It was cool to see my notes from 15 years ago!

Kids

Our oldest just got into Harry Potter, so we picked up this beautiful illustrated edition of The Sorcerer’s Stone to start things off. Our youngest is currently swarming anything about the Titanic, so our friend Peter Attia (whose podcast I’ve been on a few times) recommended the I Survived Graphic Novel Collection which includes a book on the famed ship. It was a great practice in adapting books he’s interested in and making them age appropriate. The Little Blue Trucks series has become a staple in our house, so in preparation for Valentine’s Day we picked up Little Blue Truck’s Valentine.

20 Best Lessons From Interviewing Today’s Top Performers

Ryan Holiday and Steven Pressfield

I’m not saying everyone should start a podcast. In fact, I have said the opposite many times. There are way too many of them out there…and most are not good.

I’m just saying that having a podcast is pretty magical because you get (for free) something that no amount of money in the world could buy: Access to some of the smartest and most interesting people in the world. ‘Picking someone’s brain’ is really a form of picking their pocket and yet with a podcast, you get to do that and usually the person says “Thank you so much for the opportunity” at the end.

It’s pretty magical!

Over the last several years, I’ve had the chance to spend more than a few hundred hours interviewing people for the Daily Stoic podcast (which you can subscribe to here and here). And with over 100 million downloads of Daily Stoic’s episodes so far, the people I’ve gotten access to have been beyond my dreams. I am certainly better, smarter and wiser for the privilege.

In today’s email, I wanted to share some of the absolute best things that I’ve learned in that time.

— Les Snead, the general manager of the Los Angeles Rams, told me that inside the Rams organization they talk about having “panic rules.” What do you do when everything gets mixed up, when the coverage is confusing, when the play breaks down and there’s havoc on the field? How do you respond when the play clock is running down and the play call hasn’t come in yet because the headsets aren’t working? “When there’s chaos and your brain is panicking,” Snead said, “go to your panic rules. Slow down and go to your panic rules.” This isn’t just an on-field thing. For the chaos of life, we all need panic rules. Otherwise, you’re liable to make panicked decisions. You’re liable to do something emotional, something short term, something that violates your principles and hurts your cause.

— The Olympic mountain biker Kate Courtney told me a piece of advice she received from her coach when she was pushing herself too hard in practice. “Do you want to be fast now,” her coach asked, “or later?” Meaning, do you want to win this workout or win the race? In Discipline is Destiny, when I say that self-discipline saves us, part of what it saves us from is ourselves. When we are committed, when we are driven, self-discipline isn’t always about getting up and getting to work. It’s easier to workout than to skip a workout, easier to write than relax. The problem with that is that if you want to lastyou have to be able to rest.

— Here’s another from Les Snead where he told me his strategy for ignoring the constant criticism from Monday morning quarterbacks and living room GMs. “I intentionally practice Stoicism enough to know, ‘Okay, this comment or this tweet or this simple take shouldn’t disrupt or even ruffle my emotions.’” Les said. When you know what you’re doing, he explained, you have to let your competence double as armor against criticism and complaints. It’s not that he’s egotistical—it’s that he knows his decisions were well thought out by him and his team.

— Matthew McConaughey told me he shut down his production company and his music label because “I was making B’s in five things. I want to make A’s in three things.” Those three things: his family, his foundation, his acting career. Marcus Aurelius would say that doing less “brings a double satisfaction.” You figure out what’s really essential and you do those things better.

— Along the same lines, Maya Smart told me about how she had to start saying “No” so she could say “Yes” to writing her first book (which you can pick up at the Painted Porch Bookshop). “I had to start setting boundaries,” she said “Steven Pressfield writes about this idea that you do this shadow work. For me, it was volunteering…So I started resigning from boards and telling people, ‘I’m no longer able to do this thing that I used to do because I’m focused on this book.’”

— Speaking of Pressfield, the distinction between amateur and professional is an essential piece of advice I have gotten, first from Steven’s writings and then by getting to talk to him over the years (herehere, and here). There are professional habits and amateur ones. Which are you practicing? Is this a pro or an amateur move? Ask yourself that. Constantly.

— Somewhat related, the NASCAR driver and student of Stoicism, Brad Keselowski, talked about what distinguishes a professional in his field (and it applies to most fields). “If the conditions were always perfect, the average 12-year-old could do my job,” Brad said. “The problem is that those days are very seldom.” Can you still show up and perform when the conditions aren’t perfect? That’s the question.

— I talked to one of my favorite writers, Rich Cohen, about the many lessons he learned from his father (who is the subject of Rich’s latest, The Adventures of Herbie Cohen: World’s Greatest Negotiator), including: “One of my father’s big things is that the key to success is to care, but not that much. To remain detached. To look at this situation you’re so worried about and say, ‘it’s merely a blip on the radar screen of eternity.’”

— After a billionaire-backed lawsuit put him $200 million in debt (which you can read about in my book Conspiracy), AJ Daulerio was finally driven into drug and alcohol recovery. He told me about how critical it’s been for him to have “emergency routines” that he can rely on when, to borrow Marcus Aurelius’s phrase, he is “jarred, unavoidably, by circumstances.” Whether it’s waking up to bad news, getting hit with a sudden craving, or being sent into a downward spiral by some painful memory flooding back—he has routines that bring him back to center and keep him from giving back all the progress he has made. He gets to a recovery meeting. He picks up his journal. He spends a few minutes meditating. He calls someone else and helps them. As with Les Snead’s panic rules, what you choose doesn’t matter as much as that you choose.

— Another from McConaughey. He told me he’s known in Hollywood as “a quick no and a long yes.” What a great expression! Before he says yes to doing a movie, he sleeps on it for ten days to two weeks in the frame of mind that he’s not going to do it. If he sleeps well, he doesn’t do it. If the thought that he has to do it wakes him up at night, he does it.

— I told Dr. Edith Eger I felt guilty about someone I had lost touch with and only recently reconnected with. She cut me off and told me she could give me a gift that would solve that guilt right now. “I give you a sentence,” she said, “One sentence—if I knew then what I know now, I would have done things differently.” That’s the end of that, she said. “Guilt is in the past, and the one thing you cannot change is the past.”

— When I talked to Dr. Sue Johnson, she talked about how when couples or people fight, they’re not really fighting, they’re just doing a dance, usually a dance about attachment. The dance is the problem—you go this way, I go that way, you reach out, I pull away, I reach out, you pull away—not the couple, not either one of the people. This externalization has been very helpful.

— George Raveling told me that he sees reading as a moral imperative. “People died,” he said, speaking of slaves, soldiers and civil rights activists, “so I could have the ability to read.” He also pointed out that there’s a reason people have fought so hard over the centuries to keep books from certain groups of people. I’ve always thought reading was important, but I never thought about it like that. If you’re not reading, if books aren’t playing a major role in your life, you are betraying that legacy.

— Tim Ferriss advised stripping these three words out of your vocabulary: it’s not fair. Because they are impotent and meaningless. Because they don’t do anything but make you upset.

— “Sometimes,” the professional baseball player Ryan Lavarnway told me, “you just have to say, ‘good swing, bad aim.’” Sometimes you put a great swing on a pitch but hit the ball right to a fielder. Great effort, bad result. So it goes in life. Try to think less about results. Just try to make contact with the ball, just try to give your best. If you do, that’s a win, regardless of whether it’s a home run or an out.

— I asked Matt Quinn, the frontman of indie rock band Mt. Joy, about Mt. Joy’s rise and how the band has navigated success. “It’s helpful to tether to controlling what you can control,” he said. “That’s the thing we think about all the time. We’ve put in a lot of hard work. And if we just keep doing that—if we just keep getting better and practicing our instruments and doing the controllable things—then the outcome will at least not be a failure. I believe that for us. That’s really kind of been our motto.”

— When I interviewed Dr. Lisa Barrett for the Daily Stoic Leadership Challenge, she had a great question to ask whenever you have an emotional reaction to something that happens, “Is this the only story?” Is this the only interpretation that fits here? No? What are my other options? What are some other stories I could make up about what happened here?

— James Clear, author of the wonderful bestseller Atomic Habitstold me he carves out “two sacred hours” in the morning to do his writing. “I fit it in,” he said, “before everybody else’s agenda creeps into my agenda.”

— Ron Lieber—the longtime “Your Money” columnist for The New York Times and author of The Opposite of Spoiled: Raising Kids Who Are Grounded, Generous, and Smart About Money (one of my all-time favorite titles)—told me a story about a time his three-year-old daughter asked, “Daddy, why don’t we have a summer house?” He said that she clearly had been pondering the question for some time, that she clearly had an interest in where her family stood in relation to other families, and that she clearly had a hunch that her family could have a summer house but made a decision to not have a summer house. It struck Lieber in that moment: how you spend money is a signal of what you value. “Our choices, not just our words, but our choices have meaning. They are modeling something. They model a certain form of trade-off.”

— Randall Stutman, leadership coach to some of Wall Street’s biggest CEOs, told me his teenage kids taught him an important lesson about power. You gotta figure out how to get people to think it’s their idea to do what you want them to do. “You gotta give up power to keep power,” he said. “You gotta give up power to maintain power.” One of the interesting things about power is that the harder you try to hold on to power, the less of it you actually have.

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