Caison Britt’s Reviews > The Daily Stoic: 366 Meditations on Wisdom, Perseverance, and the Art of Living > Status Update
Caison Britt
is on page 78 of 397
“Oiêsis, self-deception or arrogant and unchallenged opinion, requires that we hold all our opinions up to hard scrutiny; even our eyes deceive us.” —Holiday
— Mar 07, 2026 06:42AM
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Caison Britt
is on page 80 of 397
“Above all, keep a close watch on this—that you are never so tied to your… friends that you are pulled down to their level. If you don’t, you’ll be ruined… You must choose whether to be loved by these friends and remain the same person, or to become a better person at the cost of those friends...” —EPICTETUS, DISCOURSES, 4.2.1; 4–5
— 10 hours, 2 min ago
Caison Britt
is on page 79 of 397
“..the world can control our bodies—we can be thrown in jail or be tossed about by the weather. But the mind? That’s ours. We must protect it. Maintain control over your mind and perceptions, they’d say. It’s your most prized possession.” —Holiday
— Mar 08, 2026 09:53AM
Caison Britt
is on page 77 of 397
“In public avoid talking often and excessively about your accomplishments and dangers, for however much you enjoy recounting your dangers, it’s not so pleasant for others to hear about your affairs.” —EPICTETUS, ENCHIRIDION, 33.14
— Mar 06, 2026 07:06AM
Caison Britt
is on page 76 of 397
“..even what we get for free has a cost, if only in what we pay to store it—in our garages and in our minds.” —Holiday
— Mar 05, 2026 03:56AM
Caison Britt
is on page 75 of 397
“No slavery is more disgraceful than one which is self-imposed.” —Seneca
— Mar 04, 2026 10:38AM
Caison Britt
is on page 73 of 397
“Don’t fear self-assessment because you’re worried you might have to admit some things about yourself.” —Holiday
— Mar 02, 2026 05:00AM
Caison Britt
is on page 72 of 397
“An important place to begin in philosophy is this: a clear perception of one’s own ruling principle.” —EPICTETUS, DISCOURSES, 1.26.15
— Mar 01, 2026 04:47AM
Caison Britt
is on page 68 of 397
“Seneca was an incredibly wealthy, even famous, man—yet he was a Stoic. He had many material things, yet, as the Stoics say, he was also indifferent to them. He enjoyed them while they were there, but he accepted that they might someday disappear. What a better attitude than desperately craving more or fearfully dreading losing even one penny. Indifference is solid middle ground.” —Holiday
— Feb 27, 2026 04:37AM

