Seneca Would Feel Right at Home Today

Some frustration doesn’t come from a single moment, but builds up slowly. You see decisions that don’t make sense and hear confident words that don’t match reality. Over time, it’s less about disagreement and more about a quiet, steady exhaustion that stays with you.

Seneca lived in a world like this. He didn’t write from a safe distance, but from inside a system full of power, instability, and contradiction. He didn’t ignore the chaos or pretend it didn’t matter. Instead, he asked a tougher question: What part of this is really mine to carry? And what if I let go of the rest?

Read more

Apatheia: The Strength of a Steady Mind

The Stoics used the word apatheia to describe a state of emotional balance. While to modern readers it may sound like apathy or indifference, this is a common misconception. Apatheia is not the absence of emotion; rather, it is freedom from destructive emotions that can overwhelm judgment and cloud perception. The key distinction is that apatheia promotes a healthy relationship with emotions, not their elimination.

Epictetus famously taught that people are not disturbed by events themselves, but by the views they take of those events. A delayed response, a harsh comment, or an unexpected setback becomes emotionally painful only after the mind interprets it as something threatening or catastrophic. In that moment, the reaction begins.

The Stoics believed that learning to question those first interpretations is one of the most powerful disciplines a person can develop. When the mind becomes steadier, the emotional storms that once dominated our lives begin to lose their power.

Read more