
The Daily Stoic We’re Lucky Not To Get What We Want
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Jul 30, 2019 The discussion opens with a witty perspective on wanting and getting everything you desire, using lottery winners and famous figures as examples of this ironic truth. It highlights historical insights, particularly from Marcus Aurelius, on the triviality of our passionate yearnings. The conversation reflects on the painful realization that what we chase might not bring true fulfillment. Ultimately, it suggests that being spared from our unfulfilled desires allows us to maintain a certain innocence about life's deeper meanings.
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The Illusion of Winning
- Getting everything you want may not bring happiness.
- Lottery winners, famous people, and world leaders often find themselves tired of winning.
Trivial Desires
- Marcus Aurelius believed that what we passionately desire is often trivial.
- We may not realize this until we've sacrificed everything to achieve it.
Invisible Man's Disillusionment
- In Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man, a character realizes the emptiness of achieving their goals.
- This freedom from illusions is described as "painful and empty."



