#128 Ryan Holiday: A Stoic Life

#128 Ryan Holiday: A Stoic Life

Up next

Mental Models That Change How You Think | Bill Gurley

Bill Gurley spent years on Wall Street, built his career as a partner at Benchmark, worked through Uber’s hypergrowth era, and now serves on the board of the Santa Fe Institute, where he studies complexity and systems thinking. In this episode, Bill shares the mental models he re ...  Show more

You Don’t Need To Innovate To Be Successful | FarmVille Creator

Mark Pincus is the creator behind Farmville and Words with Friends. He built Zynga into one of the biggest gaming companies in the world and helped shape the early era of social products on the internet. In this conversation, he breaks down how great founders spot winning ideas e ...  Show more

Recommended Episodes

The Daily Stoic by Ryan Holiday Book Summary and Review | Free Audiobook
Best Book Summaries 📚 by StoryShots

Explore The Daily Stoic by Ryan Holiday in minutes. Learn about the three Stoic disciplines, monthly themes like clarity, controlling emotions, and cultivating awareness, and how to apply ancient wisdom to modern life. Show notes⁠ | ⁠PDF & Infographic⁠ | ⁠Free audiobook⁠ | Read 1 ...  Show more

Brian Klaas on the Pursuit of Power and How It Corrupts | It’s About What We’re Willing To Give
The Daily Stoic

Ryan reads today’s daily meditation and talks to professor Brian Klaas about his new book Corruptible: Who Gets Power and How It Changes Us, why we should minimize the psychological distance between leaders and the people they lead, the differences between functional and dysfunct ...  Show more

7 Ways Marcus Aurelius Will Help You Journal Like A Pro
The Daily Stoic

Almost 2000 years ago, Marcus Aurelius stole time away from his incredibly busy life full of obligations to write in his journal. By some incredible stroke of luck, that journal survives to us today. And though it is full of countless pieces of wisdom and important lessons to us, ...  Show more

You’ve Just Got To Keep Going Back | Ask DS
The Daily Stoic

It’s impossible not to read Marcus Aurelius or Seneca and sense that they were always working. Not that they were literally always at the office–as we said, they believed in a kind of work life balance–but on themselves.They were studying. They were reflecting. They were asking q ...  Show more