1910 St. Joe Center Rd, Suite 23, Fort Wayne, IN 46825
260-232-1820
heathergmft@gmail.com

Tag: how to be a stoic

My Stoic Thoughts: Day Six Stoic Week 2020

Stoic Week 2020 Saturday, October 24th, 2020 Theme:  Resilience Today’s theme and midday exercise reflected on resiliency training.  Stoics believed that we could practice our way into being more resilient.  They accomplished this by repeatedly facing that which brings up passions, either head on or through negative visualization.  It works in a way to inoculate…
Read more

My Stoic Thoughts: Day Five Stoic Week 2020

Stoic Week 2020 Friday, October 23rd, 2020 Theme:  Emotions Stoics are not emotionless, contrary to popular belief.  If they were, I’d be a horrible Stoic as I frequently experience Joy, delight, contentment, excitement, and wonder.  Instead of being emotionless, Stoics distinguished between both good emotions and bad emotions or passions.  Passions are misguided feelings that…
Read more

My Stoic Thoughts: Day Four Stoic Week 2020

Stoic Week 2020 Thursday, October 22nd, 2020 Theme:  Community Today’s theme for Stoic Week, Stoicism during a Pandemic, was one that focused on a sort of meditative practice of our relationships to others.  That being said, practice doesn’t translate to paper…er blogging quite as well as previous themes.  However, here are some of the things…
Read more

My Stoic Thoughts: Day Three Stoic Week 2020

Stoic Week 2020 Wednesday, October 21st, 2020 Theme:  Virtue I started my examination of Stoic Virtue by listing the qualities I thought were needed to live a good life.  Afterwards, I compared them to the four cardinal Stoic Virtues of Wisdom, Courage, Justice, and Self-Control/Moderation.  (See picture above for my lovely handwriting, and if you’re…
Read more

My Stoic Thoughts: Day Two Stoic Week 2020

Stoic Week 2020 Tuesday, October 20th, 2020 Theme:  Happiness Stoic happiness, or eudaimonia, is understood as the overall goal or purpose of your life rather than a feeling.  Eudaimonia is more stable because it is entirely dependent one what we can control rather than determined by outside force.  It adds meaning to our lives and…
Read more

My Stoic Thoughts: Day One Stoic Week 2020

Stoic Week 2020 Monday, October 19th, 2020 Theme:  Progress This year’s focus during Stoic Week matches the themes of last year but expands it to how we can care for ourselves, others, and our wording during a pandemic.  COVID-19 has had a lingering presence in my own life like much of yours.  I am a…
Read more

BOOK REVIEW: How to be a Stoic by Massimo Pigliucci

Pages:  277 Ideal Reader: Everyone.  Especially those who are interested in Stoic philosophy in general or as a philosophy of life, anyone seeking peace of mind and tranquility throughout their life, and those who wish to better manage their emotions. Ideal Issues:   Managing Desires and negative emotions Interacting and relating to others Depression Anxiety Personal…
Read more

My Stoic Thoughts: Days 6 & 7 of Stoic Week 2019

Stoic Week 2019 Saturday, October 12th, 2019 Theme:  Resilience:  Resilience and Preparation for Adversity Stoic resilience is not about being an emotionless rock unaffected by the world around oneself.  Unfortunate things will befall the Stoic, however they will not be overly emotionally reactive when these things occur.  This is not a natural response. You are…
Read more

My Stoic Thoughts: Day 5 of Stoic Week 2019

Stoic Week 2019 Friday, October 11th, 2019 Theme:  Emotions:  Values and the Passions Our judgments of things harm us (and our relationships with others) more than the things themselves.  We are more to blame than what is outside ourselves, however it is best to accept things as they are, attributing no blame to self or…
Read more

My Stoic Thoughts: Day 4 of Stoic Week 2019

Stoic Week 2019 Thursday, October 10th, 2019 Theme:  Community:  Relationships with Other People and Society Morning Reflection: Affection for others is part of our nature; beginning in the family we are born into and expressed to others as we age.  This affections can be directed toward ourselves and flows outward to others so that we…
Read more