I woke up. I could not get back to sleep.
I thought about doing something to kill time. But everything that crossed my mind was something I knew that I would regret in the morning.
Maybe it would be mindless eating. Maybe watching a stupid video. Maybe catching up on latest Donald Trump drama.
What would it be?
I felt drawn toward distraction, unable to stop.
I thought of waking Bobbi. I knew that talking to her would keep me from a bad decision. But I didn’t want to disturb her sleep.
What would I do?
My mind was at full race, trying to convince me that none of my bad habits were that bad. I could pick the least bad one, and have done with it.
And then, good fortune, I picked up the device on which I’d been reading “The Daily Stoic.”
I remembered.
I’d gotten it at on January 1, and I’d decided to read one essay each day.Here it was January 16th. There it was January 4th—the last day I’d read.
I had not only failed to carry out my good intention, but I had forgotten that I’d decided to do it.
I decided that rereading the first four days, and reading forward to today would be not be something I’d regret.
And I didn’t regret it. Not at all.
Lessons from The Daily Stoic
My reading reminded me:
- I need to remember what I can control and what I can’t.
- The only thing that I can reasonably hope to control is my mind. And right now I don’t control it that well.
- That all I do in the world is the product of I mind. Since I want to improve the world, I need to start with my own mind.
- My main job in life is improving my mind.
- The distractions of life are efforts by others to control my mind—and thus control me and what I do.
- There are lots of things in my mind that I don’t want there. I need to clean it up.
Another lesson
There’s another lesson here.
Intention matters. I can change the world with my mind but only by forming an intention and holding that intention.
So I renew my intention to read the Daily Stoic every day.
There’s a good chance I’ll make that intention stick.
Written with the help of StackEdit, Grammarly, Markdown Here,Blogger, and Google voice typing on Android and Chromebook, plus other stuff.
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