How Do You Fill The Void?
The Daily Stoic7 Feb 2019

How Do You Fill The Void?

Seneca wrote constantly about time. One of his most compelling observations was about how people are protective of their money, their property, their possessions, yet careless with the one thing they can’t get back. “It’s not that we have a short time to live,” he said, “but that we waste a lot of it.

Can you imagine what he would say about the fact that today people average more than 5 hours a day on mobile devices? That’s 52 days a year—one-seventh of our lives—murdered!

Cal Newport’s excellent new book Digital Minimalism, which just released this week, is an attempt to change that--to focus on limited time on the things that matter (deep work, family, being present, even the study of philosophy). In our interview with Cal for DailyStoic.com, he explained the two reasons why this is increasingly easier said than done. The first is that there are really smart computer scientists specifically engineering these devices and social media platforms to foster compulsive use. The second:

“It fills a void. Life is hard. This hardness is especially manifested during those periods of downtime when you're alone with your thoughts. People avoid these confrontations through constant, low quality digital distraction much in the way that people of another era might have dealt with these difficulties with heavy drinking. But this is just a band-aid over a deeper wound.”

How should we fill the void?

“As the ancients taught us, the sustainable response is to instead dedicate your free time toward things that matter. Take on as much responsibility as you can bear, seek out quality for the sake of quality (as Aristotle recommends in The Ethics), serve your community, connect with real people in real life and sacrifice for them.

All of this can seem daunting as compared to clicking "watch next" on your Netflix stream, but once engaged in these deeper pursuits, it's hard to go back to the shallow.”

What if instead of reaching for our phones for even a dozen of the more than 2,600 times per day (!!) the average user engages with their mobile device, we reached for a journal and a pen? Or a book? Or what if we reached for nothing at all and just stared at the ceiling lost in thought? There are few problems you couldn’t solve if those 5 hours per day were spent thinking instead of scrolling. Put some distance between you and your devices today. Fill the void with things that add value to your life.


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

Avsnitt(2847)

What Stoic Rules Make Life Less Erratic? | A Cure For Procrastination

What Stoic Rules Make Life Less Erratic? | A Cure For Procrastination

Marcus Aurelius never claimed to be a Stoic.Gregory Hays, one of Marcus Aurelius’s best translators (the one we worked with on our beautiful premium edition), writes, “If he had to be identified with ...

28 Aug 20237min

Epictetus - Discourses Pt. 3: On Being Sprung From God

Epictetus - Discourses Pt. 3: On Being Sprung From God

In today’s audiobook reading, Ryan presents an excerpt from one of the seminal texts of Stoicism, the Discourses of Epictetus, read by Michael Reid. As a series of lectures given by Epictetus that wer...

27 Aug 20234min

Christina Pazsitzky On Appreciating The Miraculousness Of Existence

Christina Pazsitzky On Appreciating The Miraculousness Of Existence

Ryan speaks with Christina Pazsitzky in the second of a two-part interview about what really matters in life, why studying history reveals how strange life is, enjoying what you have while you have it...

26 Aug 20231h 2min

This Timeless Adage Will Determine Your Destiny | Respect The Past, But Be Open To The Future

This Timeless Adage Will Determine Your Destiny | Respect The Past, But Be Open To The Future

This is not another note about memento mori.It’s about a different immutable, inescapable law of human existence that comes to us from the Stoics through Heraclitus (one of Marcus Aurelius’ favorites)...

25 Aug 20239min

Be This Kind Of Person | Ask DS

Be This Kind Of Person | Ask DS

In matters of law, Cato was a stickler. In matters of principle, Cato was uncompromising. His opponents found him exhausting. Even some of his friends thought he was impossible.Yet as we wrote about r...

24 Aug 202316min

Christina Pazsitzky On Teaching Comedians Philosophy

Christina Pazsitzky On Teaching Comedians Philosophy

Ryan speaks with Christina Pazsitzky in the first of a two-part interview about her new Netflix comedy special Mom Genes, why she believes that comedians should go to college to study philosophy, how ...

23 Aug 20231h 7min

This Is Real Power

This Is Real Power

Seneca, Cato, and Marcus Aurelius operated in the real world. They navigated within and around the halls of power. They had people working above and below them, and they needed to figure out how to mo...

23 Aug 20233min

The Biggest Lie In The World | Toxic Habits The Stoics Want You To Stop Doing

The Biggest Lie In The World | Toxic Habits The Stoics Want You To Stop Doing

You may well have said it yesterday, or overheard someone else saying it, “Oh, I’ll do it in the morning…I’ll do it after I wake up…I’ll get to it later…I just need to do this other thing first.”It’s ...

22 Aug 20238min

Populärt inom Business & ekonomi

badfluence
framgangspodden
varvet
rss-jossan-nina
uppgang-och-fall
avanzapodden
bathina-en-podcast
svd-tech-brief
borsmorgon
rss-kort-lang-analyspodden-fran-di
rss-borsens-finest
rss-inga-dumma-fragor-om-pengar
loungepodden
kapitalet-en-podd-om-ekonomi
tabberaset
rss-dagen-med-di
dynastin
lastbilspodden
affarsvarlden
market-makers