The One Thing You Must Avoid
The Daily Stoic4 Jan 2019

The One Thing You Must Avoid

Imagine this. You’ve worked for years on this novel—one that is indisputably the best thing you’ve ever done. You manage to get a publisher to buy it. You start to get rave reviews. You sell out your first printing. Then suddenly, all the momentum evaporates. You talk to the clerk at a bookstore and he tells you the publisher has just stopped resupplying them. Within months, what should have been a beloved bestseller, slips into obscurity.

Why? Well, according to your editor it’s because they’ve been sued by Hitler over the rights to Mein Kampf...and a US Federal Court sided with the Nazis. And that is basically the end of your career as an author—at least it was for John Fante.

You can read the full story, which Ryan wrote in an original piece for Medium, but one would expect this would make a person pretty bitter and angry right?

Not Fante.

“I think the one thing that a writer must avoid is bitterness,” John Fante told the writer Ben Pleasants in an interview in 1979. “I think it’s the one fault that can destroy him. It can shrivel him up… I’ve fought it all my life.” His son, many years later, would reflect on how his father dealt with this incredibly unlucky and ill-timed setback.

I’m not naive enough to think good work always wins out in the end. There are plenty of painters who died in Auschwitz. I don’t necessarily think there is justice in the world, it’s that he had the strength of character not to let it break him.

No one would say John Fante was Stoic. He was often egotistical and vain and could hardly be called self-disciplined. But John Fante did respond to that those strokes of misfortune in his life with a poise that Marcus Aurelius and Epictetus couldn’t have helped but admired. It’s a good lesson for the rest of us: We can work really really hard on something. We can do everything right and more. And we can still get royally screwed. But we have to resist the temptation to see things that way, we can’t nurse a sense of aggrievement or bitterness. Because it will shrivel us up. That is what will break us.

Besides, as you’ll see in the Fante story, his bad luck was, many decades later, compensated for with almost unimaginably good luck. Which is just how life goes.

See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Denne episoden er hentet fra en åpen RSS-feed og er ikke publisert av Podme. Den kan derfor inneholde annonser.

Episoder(2980)

Marcus Aurelius's Rules for Living a Better Life

Marcus Aurelius's Rules for Living a Better Life

To wrap up Meditations Month, today Ryan explores Marcus’s best rules for using the precious time in your life.Reading Marcus Aurelius can change your life, but only if you know how to read his work �...

29 Apr 10min

It’s Right There. Take It. | Stoic Lessons Hidden in Bruce Springsteen Songs

It’s Right There. Take It. | Stoic Lessons Hidden in Bruce Springsteen Songs

You can’t learn history that you don’t take the time to look at, that you think you already understand.📚 BOOKS:Deliver Me from Nowhere: The Making of Bruce Springsteen's NebraskaWisdom Takes Work 🎙...

28 Apr 12min

Nothing Is As Encouraging As This | The Freedom of Contempt

Nothing Is As Encouraging As This | The Freedom of Contempt

It was a dark world…and Marcus Aurelius desperately needed some light.LAST CHANCE | Your ticket to the live Q&A with Ryan Holiday 👉 https://store.dailystoic.com/pages/meditations-month-2026See Priv...

27 Apr 8min

The Most Powerful Lines From Marcus Aurelius

The Most Powerful Lines From Marcus Aurelius

How can a 2,000-year-old book still change the way you think today? In this episode, Ryan Holiday shares passages from Meditations that he’s returned to more than a hundred times over the years. Each ...

26 Apr 31min

Why “Meditations” Needs a New Name—According to William O. Stephens

Why “Meditations” Needs a New Name—According to William O. Stephens

Most people read Marcus Aurelius the wrong way. In this episode, Ryan sits down with philosopher William Stephens to discuss why the title "Meditations" may be misleading, what these writings were act...

25 Apr 33min

It’s Never an Accident | Ask Daily Stoic

It’s Never an Accident | Ask Daily Stoic

Our true character comes out under pressure. So we must train that character, we must develop our bodies, we have to put in the work. Your ticket to a live Q&A with Ryan Holiday 👉 https://store.dai...

24 Apr 16min

Empower Yourself with This | Why You Need to Get In the Arena

Empower Yourself with This | Why You Need to Get In the Arena

We all have those days where we’d rather just not. Days where we’d rather not deal with that annoying co-worker or petty family member. Days where we’d rather not bother with all the work we have to d...

23 Apr 12min

You Have Access to a Miracle of History

You Have Access to a Miracle of History

The Stoics weren’t just leaders and philosophers. They were parents, spouses, and friends, who experienced joy, who fell in love, who cherished the beauty of the world around them. Reading Marcus Aure...

22 Apr 3min

Populært innen Business og økonomi

stopp-verden
lydartikler-fra-aftenposten
dine-penger-pengeradet
e24-podden
rss-penger-polser-og-politikk
rss-borsmorgen-okonominyhetene
rss-skravla-gar
rss-pa-konto
pengesnakk
utbytte
pengepodden-2
tid-er-penger-en-podcast-med-peter-warren
finansredaksjonen
stormkast-med-valebrokk-stordalen
morgenkaffen-med-finansavisen
livet-pa-veien-med-jan-erik-larssen
rss-sunn-okonomi
liberal-halvtime
rss-markedspuls-2
lederpodden