The series / Inspired by Letters from a Stoic

Letters from a Stoic, chapter by chapter.

A concise route through the major teachings, with no requirement to become a person who says “journey” during meetings.

01

The Control Line

Seneca repeatedly separates what belongs to us from what never did. The useful move is not indifference; it is refusing to spend agency on an outcome you cannot command.

Takeaway

Put your effort where it can alter conduct, preparation, or repair.

02

Borrowed Trouble

Anticipating every possible disaster feels responsible, but often means suffering several times before anything has happened. Preparation needs a stopping point.

Takeaway

Prepare once, then return to the day you are actually living.

03

Enough Is a Number

Status expands the appetite faster than it satisfies it. Naming enough protects time and judgment from endless comparison.

Takeaway

Decide what sufficient looks like before the room starts bidding.

04

Practice the Setback

Small voluntary discomforts and rehearsed setbacks reduce panic when plans fail. The goal is confidence that you can respond, not a fantasy that nothing will go wrong.

Takeaway

Practice recovery before you need it.

05

Keep Your Own Counsel

Crowds are emotionally efficient and intellectually expensive. Seneca asks us to notice whose approval is quietly operating the steering wheel.

Takeaway

Choose advisers deliberately; do not outsource your standards to volume.

06

A Reply You Respect

Stoicism becomes practical when the response is specific: the email sent, boundary named, apology made, or silence kept.

Takeaway

Measure the day by the quality of your reply, not the convenience of the event.

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