Home Podcasts Stoicism Mentality — Ancient Wisdom for the Modern Mind
Stoicism Mentality — Ancient Wisdom for the Modern Mind

Stoicism Mentality — Ancient Wisdom for the Modern Mind

Stoicism Mentality 7 Episodes May 20, 2026

This podcast brings the teachings of Stoic philosophers like Marcus Aurelius, Seneca, and Epictetus to life. It presents Stoicism not as abstract philosophy but as practical tools for emotional control, discipline, and living a meaningful life. Each episode explores a Stoic principle and shows how to apply it in modern times. New episodes are released every Tuesday and Friday.

Episodes

Your First Week as a Stoic — The Daily Practice May 20, 2026 00:11:45 Ruth loves the ideas. She has learned about the dichotomy of control, about emotions, about amor fati. But she has not actually changed anything in her daily life. She has tried morning routines before — meditation apps, gratitude journals, workout plans — and they all lasted about four days.In this episode, Michael gives Ruth the simplest possible daily Stoic practice: a 5-minute morning, a 30-se
Love Your Fate, Remember Your Death — Amor Fati & Memento Mori May 10, 2026 00:10:02 Ruth was passed over for a promotion she worked toward for two years. She is devastated. She keeps replaying what she could have done differently. She feels like the last two years were wasted.In this episode, Michael introduces two of the most powerful Stoic practices — amor fati (love your fate) and memento mori (remember you will die). Together, they transform how you experience both suffering
How to Stop Your Emotions from Running Your Life May 7, 2026 00:10:50 Ruth got into a heated argument with her sister. She knew she was overreacting. She could feel it. But she could not stop herself. The anger just took over.In this episode, Michael teaches Ruth the Stoic model of emotion — impression, judgment, response — and reveals Seneca's devastatingly simple advice for anger: delay. Not suppression. Delay. A few seconds is all it takes for your rational m
The One Idea That Changes Everything — Dichotomy of Control May 4, 2026 00:09:33 Ruth spent three hours rewriting an email to her boss. Eleven drafts. She still has not sent it. She knows she cannot control her boss's reaction. But she cannot stop trying.This is the episode that changes everything. Michael introduces the most important idea in Stoicism — the dichotomy of control — from the opening lines of Epictetus's Enchiridion. The foundation of every Stoic practice
An Emperor, a Playwright, and a Slave — The Three Great Stoics Apr 29, 2026 00:12:33 An emperor who ruled the world and cried in his diary. A millionaire who preached simplicity from a mansion. A slave whose master broke his leg — and who became one of the most influential philosophers in history.In this episode, Michael and Ruth tell the stories of the three great Stoics — Marcus Aurelius, Seneca, and Epictetus. Three radically different lives. Three radically different circumsta
Letters from a Stoic — Seneca's Guide to Living Well Apr 25, 2026 00:15:29 Imagine receiving a letter from one of the wisest people who ever lived — practical advice on time, anger, grief, wealth, and friendship, written with warmth and brutal honesty. That is exactly what Seneca's Letters to Lucilius offers. In this episode, we explore the most accessible and practical collection of Stoic wisdom ever written.Seneca was not writing abstract philosophy. He was writing
Meditations — The Book That Changed Everything Apr 22, 2026 00:11:04 Marcus Aurelius never meant for anyone to read his journal. Written during military campaigns and plague, Meditations is the most honest self-help book ever written — because it was never meant to help anyone but himself.In this episode:• Why Marcus wrote Meditations in a military tent, not a palace• "You have power over your mind, not outside events"• How to apply the Dichotomy of Contr

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