
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In this episode I talk about what it’s like to take on a large number of new roles in a very short period of time, and how doing so can leave you feeling detached from yourself unless you approach those roles with clear thinking, humility, and attention. Over the last few years I became a husband, a father, an immigrant, and a practitioner in a new career field — all while continuing the roles I already had. That much change, that fast, forced me to build a framework for integrating new roles without losing who I am or slipping into unreasonable self-judgment.
Key takeaways from this episode include:
Roles come with duties — and the more life you live, the more roles you’ll have. That’s normal, but it demands active attention.
You will not be good at a new role at first — and that’s not a sign that you shouldn’t take it on. It’s a sign that you should start like a student, with humility.
You must “titrate” your expectations — judge yourself only according to what is reasonable for your stage of development in that role.
Define the “counting to 10” version of any new role — focus on performing the simplest, most fundamental parts well before anything else.
Habituation shapes character — who you are today is the sum of what you’ve gotten comfortable with; who you’ll become depends on the habits you build now.
For an ad-free version of this podcast please visit https://stoicismpod.com/members
For links to other valuable Stoic things, please visit https://links.stoicismpod.com
If you'd like to provide feedback on this episode, or have questions, you may do so as a member. Email sent by non-members will not be answered (though they may be read). This isn't punitive, I just cannot keep up. Limiting access to members reduces my workload. You're always invited to leave a comment on Spotify, member or not.
Thanks for listening and have a great day!
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
By Evergreen Podcasts4.8
618618 ratings
In this episode I talk about what it’s like to take on a large number of new roles in a very short period of time, and how doing so can leave you feeling detached from yourself unless you approach those roles with clear thinking, humility, and attention. Over the last few years I became a husband, a father, an immigrant, and a practitioner in a new career field — all while continuing the roles I already had. That much change, that fast, forced me to build a framework for integrating new roles without losing who I am or slipping into unreasonable self-judgment.
Key takeaways from this episode include:
Roles come with duties — and the more life you live, the more roles you’ll have. That’s normal, but it demands active attention.
You will not be good at a new role at first — and that’s not a sign that you shouldn’t take it on. It’s a sign that you should start like a student, with humility.
You must “titrate” your expectations — judge yourself only according to what is reasonable for your stage of development in that role.
Define the “counting to 10” version of any new role — focus on performing the simplest, most fundamental parts well before anything else.
Habituation shapes character — who you are today is the sum of what you’ve gotten comfortable with; who you’ll become depends on the habits you build now.
For an ad-free version of this podcast please visit https://stoicismpod.com/members
For links to other valuable Stoic things, please visit https://links.stoicismpod.com
If you'd like to provide feedback on this episode, or have questions, you may do so as a member. Email sent by non-members will not be answered (though they may be read). This isn't punitive, I just cannot keep up. Limiting access to members reduces my workload. You're always invited to leave a comment on Spotify, member or not.
Thanks for listening and have a great day!
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

2,642 Listeners

14,249 Listeners

1,862 Listeners

11,923 Listeners

12,717 Listeners

880 Listeners

397 Listeners

4,928 Listeners

580 Listeners

41 Listeners

99 Listeners

99 Listeners

36 Listeners

88 Listeners

60 Listeners