

The Stoic Life Hack: Say Less, Live Better
"The man who tries too hard to shine dims their own light". â Tao de Ching
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Have you ever done something good and then felt an uncontrollable urge to shoehorn it into a totally unrelated conversation? Iâm really hoping this isnât an accidental confessional and itâs not just me â weâve all done this at least once, right?
Anyway, I realise Iâve shot myself in the foot here because if I use a good deed that Iâve done as an example, Iâm instantly a hypocrite so just imagine some heroic act, it doesnât matter what. What does matter is the empty feeling you get after saying it out loud and how it is in direct opposition to the response you were expecting.
Exaggerating a bit, you may expect to be high fived to death by everyone who couldâve plausibly overheard you, or paraded across the room and praised for your generosity. What you actually received instead was a suspicious look from others as if they knew what you were trying, like they had direct access to your desperate thoughts. When people vie for praise itâs glaringly obvious and the insecurity can be seen a mile away.
Now say someone brings up your good deed at a restaurant, thereâs no need to be bashful, you just shouldnât make your own noise.
Praising yourself instantly makes you unreachable, trapping you in your own âme, me meâ bubble where youâre the star of your own show.
To add to the pile of Marcus Auerlius quotes:
âA man makes no noise over a good deed, but passes on to another as a vine to bear grapes again in seasonâ.
Thereâs also a similar quote thatâs doing the rounds on social media:
âmaybe your garden isnât growing because every time a flower grows you cut it to prove to someone that youâre a gardenerâ.
If youâre praised then, donât make up a lie, but humbly redirect it to others who helped, so you donât get drunk on the compliment.
Sorry to bombard you with quotes so early but the Stoic philosopher Epictetus said something similar:
âAvoid a frequent and excessive mention of your own actions and dangers. For, however agreeable it may be to yourself to mention the risks you have run, it is not equally agreeable to others to hear your adventuresâ.
Now, you might disagree with the end of the quote as it sounds like he wants you to not tell stories and trade your personality for a closed-off one. To extend an olive branch to a man who died 2000 years ago, keep the interesting stories you tell occasionally and do away with the ones youâve over-used, and re-hashed to oblivion. Let me explain why.
Using the same stories keeps us locked in the past
Stories told over and over can lock us into ways of acting, thinking and feeling. When we re-hash a story weâve already told, weâre reopening an old narrative and transporting ourselves to an outdated version of ourselves. In other words, if we tell a story repeatedly, it has the power to keep us in the past, returning us to our old patterns of behaviour.
For example, say you were involved in a car crash that was your fault (sorry that sounded like the opening line of an insurance scam stick with me). Anyway, if youâre not a confident driver and itâs been years since youâve driven, telling this story over and over again will solidify your self-perception that you are a danger on the road which, in turn, will make it harder for you to overcome your anxieties about driving.
In this sense, your self-belief or rather lack thereof is stunted by rehashing your inadequate past (sorry that sounded less scathing in my head). A related quote that lives rent free in my head is by the philosopher Kierkegaard who wrote âalthough life can only be understood backwards, it must be lived forwardsâ.
Conversely, as previously mentioned in the context of sharing a good deed, if you re-hash a story which revolves around you being the hero, youâll also stunt your growth, whilst simultaneously inflating your ego to frightening proportions. People will instantly see through this façade, making you appear full of yourself (remember that âme, me, meâ bubble, youâd be back in it).
So, when we tell a story about a previous situation, it is often a selective account, omitting details that we deem less important in favour of details that make us look good; the hero of our own story.
My Weakness
At this point Iâm conscious that it has been heavy on the messaging so let me come clean with my weakness. When someone Iâm not that familiar with asks me a question I donât have an answer to, my brain malfunctions. One Iâve been getting more recently is this stinker of a question:
Howâs the job market going, any idea what you want to do?
Iâve tried all the tactics with this one, saying Iâm in between jobs right now, or even mentioning a job that I have no intention of doing just to fill the air and satisfy their traditional guidelines of what counts as a job, just so we can get to a different topic. Afterwards, I would think âI wish life was like classic quiz show Mastermind that lets you just skip a question with no pushbackâ. Then every time, I realise I can actually just do this without being rude. If I donât have an answer, thatâs alright, I donât have to throw a hail Mary of a random job out there that I think would make me look like Iâve got my life figured out, I think my movie collection answers that for me.
If, like me then, people pleasing is an issue and talking is a reflex let me leave you with another quote by Epictetus:
âIf you wish to be thought so likewise by anyone, appear so to yourself, and it will suffice youâ.
Thanks for reading,
Brandon
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