C
September 1st
A STRONG SOUL IS BETTER THAN GOOD LUCK
“The rational soul is stronger than any kind of fortune—from its own share it guides its affairs
here or there, and is itself the cause of a happy or miserable life.”
—SENECA, MORAL LETTERS, 98.2b
ato the Younger had enough money to dress in fine clothing. Yet he often walked around Rome
barefoot, indifferent to assumptions people made about him as he passed. He could have indulged in
the finest food. He chose instead to eat simple fare. Whether it was raining or intensely hot, he went
bareheaded by choice.
Why not indulge in some easy relief? Because Cato was training his soul to be strong and resilient.
Specifically, he was learning indifference: an attitude of “let come what may” that would serve him well
in the trenches with the army, in the Forum and the Senate, and in his life as a father and statesman.
His training prepared him for any conditions, any kind of luck. If we undergo our own training and
preparations, we might find ourselves similarly strengthened.