I
August  23rd
IT’S    IN  YOUR    SELF-INTEREST“Therefore, explain why a   wise    person  shouldn’t   get drunk—not   with    words,  but by  the facts   of
its ugliness    and offensiveness.  It’s    most    easy    to  prove   that    so-called   pleasures,  when    they    go
beyond  proper  measure,    are but punishments.”
—SENECA,    MORAL   LETTERS,    83.27s   there   a   less    effective   technique   to  persuading  people  to  do  something   than    haranguing  them?   Is  there
anything    that    turns   people  off more    than    abstract    notions?    That’s  why the Stoics  don’t   say,    “Stop   doing
this,   it’s    a   sin.”   Instead they    say,    “Don’t  do  this    because it  will    make    you miserable.” They    don’t   say,
“Pleasure   isn’t   pleasurable.”   They    say,    “Endless    pleasure    becomes its own form    of  punishment.”    Their
methods of  persuasion  hew the line    in  The 48  Laws    of  Power:  “Appeal to  People’s    Self-Interest   Never   to
Their   Mercy   or  Gratitude.”
If  you find    yourself    trying  to  persuade    someone to  change  or  do  something   differently,    remember    what
an  effective   lever   self-interest   is. It’s    not that    this    or  that    is  bad,    it’s    that    it  is  in  their   best    interest    to  do  it  a
different   way.    And show    them—don’t  moralize.
And what    happens when    you apply   this    way of  thinking    to  your    own behavior?