the daily stoic

(ReeidwVdKLm) #1

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May 16th
THE CHAIN METHOD

“If you don’t wish to be a hot-head, don’t feed your habit. Try as a
first step to remain calm and count the days you haven’t been
angry. I used to be angry every day, now every other day, then
every third or fourth... if you make it as far as 30 days, thank
God! For habit is first weakened and then obliterated. When you
can say ‘I didn’t lose my temper today, or the next day, or for three
or four months, but kept my cool under provocation,’ you will
know you are in better health.”
—EPICTETUS, DISCOURSES, 2.18.11b–14

he comedian Jerry Seinfeld once gave a young comic named Brad
Isaac some advice about how to write and create material. Keep a
calendar, he told him, and each day that you write jokes, put an X. Soon
enough, you get a chain going—and then your job is to simply not break the
chain. Success becomes a matter of momentum. Once you get a little, it’s
easier to keep it going.
Whereas Seinfeld used the chain method to build a positive habit,
Epictetus was saying that it can also be used to eliminate a negative one. It’s
not all that different than taking sobriety “one day at a time.” Start with one
day doing whatever it is, be it managing your temper or wandering eyes or
procrastination. Then do the same the following day and the day after that.
Build a chain and then work not to break it. Don’t ruin your streak.

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